How to read these cost breakdowns
Every cost breakdown below includes three components: tuition fees, living costs, and one-time costs. All figures are for the full degree duration — typically 6 years for Eastern European destinations and 5–6 years for UK/Australia.
Exchange rates fluctuate. All INR conversions use approximate 2025 rates: 1 USD ≈ ₹84, 1 GBP ≈ ₹107, 1 EUR ≈ ₹90, 1 AUD ≈ ₹55. Treat these as planning figures, not guarantees.
Fee structures at overseas universities change annually. Some universities increase fees each year; others lock in a rate for the degree. Living costs vary significantly by city and lifestyle. The figures below represent realistic mid-range estimates for 2025 — not minimums and not maximums. Build a 15% contingency buffer into any plan.
Georgia
Georgia has become one of the most popular destinations for Indian students — Tbilisi State Medical University, David Tvildiani Medical University, and Caucasus International University among the main options. English-medium, NMC-recognised (for approved universities), established Indian student communities.
Georgia — 6 Year Total
₹42–65 Lakhs all-inRomania
Romania offers EU-standard medical education with NMC recognition at several universities — Carol Davila University of Medicine in Bucharest, Iuliu Hațieganu in Cluj-Napoca, and Grigore T. Popa in Iași. EU membership means the degree is recognised across Europe. Growing popularity among Indian students.
Romania — 6 Year Total
₹40–60 Lakhs all-inPoland
Poland has several well-regarded medical universities with long-established English-medium programmes for international students — Medical University of Warsaw, Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Medical University of Gdańsk, Poznan University of Medical Sciences. EU member. Strong academic reputation.
Poland — 6 Year Total
₹65–100 Lakhs all-inHungary & Czech Republic
Hungary (University of Pécs, Semmelweis University Budapest, University of Szeged, University of Debrecen) and the Czech Republic (Charles University Prague, Masaryk University Brno) are among the most academically respected Eastern European destinations. Both are EU members with strong teaching hospital networks.
Hungary / Czech Republic — 6 Year Total
₹95–150 Lakhs all-inIreland
Ireland offers English-medium medical education at internationally respected universities — Royal College of Surgeons Ireland (RCSI), University College Dublin, University College Cork, University of Galway, University of Limerick. GMC-recognised. Growing choice for Indian students as an alternative to the UK.
Ireland — 5-6 Year Total
₹1.1–1.7 Crore all-inUnited Kingdom
UK medicine is five to six years, undergraduate entry, through UCAS. Requires UCAT and strong A-Level or equivalent qualifications. GMC degree is one of the most internationally recognised medical qualifications in the world. Expensive — but genuinely premium.
United Kingdom — 5-6 Year Total
₹1.8–2.8 Crore all-inAustralia
Australia offers undergraduate entry (UCAT ANZ required) and graduate entry (GAMSAT required). International student fees are among the highest globally, and the number of places available to international students has been reduced in recent years. Post-graduation, AMC registration is possible and Australia has strong career opportunities for doctors.
Australia — 5-6 Year Total
₹2.2–3.5 Crore all-inHidden costs nobody tells you
Every consultancy quotes tuition fees. Almost none of them quote these.
The licensing exam to practice in India. With a pass rate of ~29%, many students sit this multiple times. Add the cost of preparation courses: ₹30,000–1,50,000.
After passing FMGE/NExT you complete a 1-year rotating internship. Some hospitals pay a stipend. Others charge. Factor in living costs for this year in India.
Degree certificates, transcripts, and other documents need apostille and sometimes translation for NMC registration. Often overlooked until graduation.
Stethoscope, diagnostic kit, white coats, and textbooks not covered by fees. Some universities have libraries; others expect students to purchase core texts.
If the rupee weakens against USD or EUR, your actual cost in INR increases. Over a 6-year degree, exchange rate movements can add or subtract ₹5–15 lakhs.
Many consultancies charge separately for application processing, visa assistance, and orientation services. These are often negotiable or avoidable with direct applications.
Six years abroad is hard. Counselling, unexpected health costs, emergency flights home, and family visits are real expenses that rarely appear in planning documents.
Some universities do not lock in fees for the full degree. Annual increases of 5–10% are common. Always ask whether fees are fixed for the duration before enrolling.
Private MBBS India vs overseas — honest comparison
This comparison is more nuanced than most guides admit. Private MBBS in India is not automatically cheaper than overseas — in some cases it is significantly more expensive.
| Factor | Private MBBS India | Georgia / Romania | Poland / Hungary | UK / Australia |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total tuition (5–6 yrs) | ₹40–100L (varies enormously) | ₹25–50L | ₹50–90L | ₹1.5–3Cr |
| Living costs | ₹15–30L (hostel/mess) | ₹20–40L | ₹25–50L | ₹65–150L |
| Licensing exam after graduation | None — direct practice | FMGE / NExT required | FMGE / NExT required | FMGE / NExT (or stay abroad) |
| FMGE pass rate | Not applicable | ~29% average | Higher than average | Higher than average |
| Degree recognition in India | Direct — no exam | After FMGE/NExT | After FMGE/NExT | After FMGE/NExT |
| International career mobility | Limited without further exams | Limited (EU for Romania/Poland) | Good (EU) | Excellent |
| NRI / management quota seats | ₹80L–1.5Cr (some colleges) | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
For many families, a mid-tier private medical college in India — total cost ₹60–80 lakhs — is genuinely more expensive than Georgia or Romania, delivers a qualification that works in India without a licensing exam, but offers limited international mobility. The comparison is not "private India is always worse" or "overseas is always better" — it depends entirely on your budget, your career goals, and which specific institutions you are comparing. Do the full cost calculation for the specific private college you are considering, not generic estimates.
Education loans for overseas MBBS — India
Several Indian banks and NBFCs offer education loans specifically for overseas MBBS. This is a significant and underused route — many families assume loans are not available for overseas medical education. They are.
State Bank of India — Scholar Loan / Global Ed-Vantage
Amount: Up to ₹1.5 crore for premier institutions, ₹80L for others. Interest rate: Approximately 10.15–11.15% per annum (2025). Moratorium: Course duration + 1 year. Collateral: Required above ₹7.5L.
SBI is the most commonly used lender for overseas MBBS. Apply through the branch or online portal. Processing takes 4–8 weeks — start early.
Bank of Baroda — Baroda Scholar Scheme
Amount: Up to ₹80L. Interest rate: Approximately 9.7–10.5%. Repayment: Up to 15 years. Competitive rates and reasonable processing times. Worth comparing against SBI for your specific destination country.
Axis Bank / ICICI Bank / HDFC Credila (Private)
Amount: Up to ₹1–1.5Cr. Interest rate: Typically 11–14% — higher than PSU banks. Advantage: Faster processing, more flexible on destination country and institution type. Useful when PSU banks decline due to institution not being on their approved list.
Prodigy Finance (International)
Amount: Covers tuition at approved institutions. Interest rate: USD SOFR + margin — variable, currently ~12–14%. Advantage: No Indian collateral required. Loan is denominated in USD. Useful for UK and European destinations where family collateral in India is insufficient for the loan amount needed.
Before taking any education loan, calculate the total repayment burden: A ₹50L loan at 11% over 10 years costs approximately ₹84L in total repayments. A ₹1.2Cr loan at the same rate costs approximately ₹2Cr. As a doctor in India, starting salary for a general practitioner is typically ₹50,000–1,20,000 per month. Model whether your likely income covers the EMI before committing to the loan amount.
Full comparison table
| Destination | Total 6-yr cost (USD equiv.) | Total in INR (approx.) | Degree length | EU recognised | NMC recognised |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Georgia | USD 60–100k | ₹50–84L | 6 years | No | Yes (select unis) |
| Romania | USD 65–115k | ₹55–97L | 6 years | Yes | Yes (select unis) |
| Poland | USD 100–175k | ₹84–147L | 6 years | Yes | Yes (select unis) |
| Hungary / Czech | USD 135–200k | ₹113–168L | 6 years | Yes | Yes |
| Ireland | USD 270–490k | ₹2.3–4.1Cr | 5–6 years | Yes | Yes |
| United Kingdom | USD 265–430k | ₹2.2–3.6Cr | 5–6 years | No (post-Brexit) | Yes |
| Australia | USD 340–520k | ₹2.9–4.4Cr | 5–6 years | No | Yes |
The cheapest option is not automatically the right option. What matters is the cost relative to the quality of education, the licensing exam pass rates of graduates, and your career goals. A degree that costs ₹55L but results in 3–4 years of failed licensing exam attempts, preparation costs, and lost earnings is not cheaper than a ₹90L degree whose graduates pass first time. Always factor in the post-graduation pathway, not just the tuition fees.