Telangana NEET UG 2025 revised merit list out; 1,020 ineligible after SC upheld domicile rule; 16,762 eligible
Suviral Shukla | September 12, 2025 | 04:14 PM IST | 2 mins read
A total of 1,020 are not eligible for the Telangana NEET UG 2025 counselling, where 689 students found ineligible for local status after the Supreme Court upheld the new domicile rule.
The Kaloji Narayana Rao University of Health Sciences (KNRUHS) has published the Telangana NEET UG 2025 revised merit list today. Earlier, 43,400 students were eligible for admission to MBBS, BDS, however, after the Supreme Court upheld the new domicile rule, only 16,762 candidates are eligible to participate in the Telangana NEET UG 2025 counselling.
According to the revised merit list, a total of 1,020 are not eligible for the Telangana NEET UG 2025 counselling, where 689 students found ineligible for local status after the Supreme Court upheld the new domicile rule. The remaining students have been instructed to upload the relevant academic documents to claim the local domicile status.
Out of the 16,762 candidates 102 have been eligible under CAP 4 counselling, and 40 under the Persons with Disability (PwD) category. The Telangana NEET UG 2025 was put on hold after the legal validity of the 4-year domicile rule was challenged in the apex court.
Also read MUHS VC: Medical colleges need human resources, not buildings; MBBS student burnout on the rise
Submit grievances before September 14
The state government introduced the residency rule in 2024. According to which, candidates should have studied or reside in Telangana for at least four consecutive years, up to Class 12, before appearing for the MBBS, BDS entrance test,
The Telangana NEET UG 2025 provisional merit list is available on the official website at knruhs.telangana.gov.in.
The Telangana NEET UG 2025 merit list includes details regarding candidates’ NEET roll number, rank, score, NCC grade marks, final score after addition of grace marks, name of the candidate, gender, category, EWS, minority.
“Any grievances with regard to the merit list can be brought to the notice immediately along with supporting documents, which shall be uploaded/mailed on mail id: knrugadmission@gmail.com on or before 05.00 PM on 14.09.2026,” according to the official notification.
Candidates must note that grievances submitted after 5 pm on September 14 against Telangana NEET UG 2025 merit list will not be considered by the university.
KNRUHS will issue the final merit list after addressing all the grievances. “After displaying the final merit list, the seat matrix and notification for web options will be notified in the university website,” the statement added.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]350 MBBS, 50 BDS seats added in Rajasthan NEET UG 2025 round 2 counselling; apply by today
According to the Rajasthan NEET UG 2025 counselling schedule, the choice filling window for round 2 will be open from September 15 to 17. The round 2 seat allotment results will be declared on September 19.
Suviral Shukla | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- SAT, PSAT Exams: How College Board is expanding access to global education
- ‘It affects NUJS image’: Students complain of campus decay, demand VC ouster over harassment case
- New H-1B visa fees may have ‘negative’ impact on domestic placements at engineering colleges
- West Bengal: After 10-year wait for school jobs, Lepcha teachers now unpaid for 3 months
- GRE, TOEFL exams opening global education doors for students: ETS country manager
- Nursing ‘especially popular’ with Indian students at University of East Anglia’s School of Health Sciences
- Online, hybrid programmes have ‘broadened the MBA degree’s appeal’: GMAC regional director
- As the sector matures, international schools must support public schooling: TAISI chair
- AI reducing mediocrity in art, write Sir JJ School of Art, Architecture and Design faculty
- Bayer India expert: Freshers jobs now more about skills than degrees; AI, ML rarely taught effectively