Programmes
Courses & pathways
Most families we speak with are weighing undergraduate medical degrees delivered abroad - often framed as MBBS or MD depending on the country. The labels differ; what matters is structure, recognition, and how you plan for licensing after graduation.

Duration
Many programmes run about six years including internship-style training; always confirm the exact breakdown in your offer.
Language
English-medium for the full course should be documented - marketing pages are not enough for regulatory planning.
After graduation
FMGE/NExT and internship rules in India evolve; we orient you at a high level - formal coaching stays with specialist providers.
MBBS, MD, and naming
In several countries the first professional degree in medicine is called MD while Indian families often say MBBS. For planning purposes, focus on total duration, curricular phases, clinical rotations, and how the qualification is registered in the host country - not the label alone.
Foundation or pre-medical years may be part of the package for some intakes. Understand whether those years count toward the academic and internship totals your regulators care about.
Classroom vs clinical training
Strong programmes combine early patient contact with structured pre-clinical science. Ask how hospitals are assigned, whether training is centralised or dispersed, and what support exists for international students during rotations.
If you compare two universities at similar fee points, clinical breadth and supervision quality often matter more than brochure photography.
Linking your course choice to licensing
Indian students generally plan for NMC requirements after graduation, including screening exams and internship rules as they stand in your cohort year. We help you understand the categories of requirements so you can time NEET, application, and graduation realistically.
We do not replace NMC, university, or coaching providers - we keep your paperwork and expectations aligned so fewer surprises appear late in the journey.
