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Is MBBS in Uzbekistan Valid in India? NMC Rules, FMGE & NExT Explained (2026)

Yes — an Uzbek MBBS is valid in India when NMC rules are followed. The 2026 explainer: WDOMS listing, NEET requirement, internship rules, FMGE/NExT screening and a compliance checklist.

Jun 28, 2026

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Author: Zenvia Super Admin Updated: Jul 05, 2026

Is MBBS in Uzbekistan Valid in India? NMC Rules, FMGE & NExT Explained (2026)
NEET & Licensing

Type "MBBS in Uzbekistan" into any search engine and the first question people also ask is the one that matters most: is the degree valid in India? The answer is yes — fully valid, when the NMC's conditions are met from the day you take admission. The failures you occasionally hear about are almost never the country's fault; they are rule-breaking by students or the agents who advised them. This guide sets out exactly what the rules are for MBBS in Uzbekistan, and how to stay on the right side of every one.

The Framework: WDOMS + FMGL Regulations, Not "Approved Lists"

Despite what agent brochures imply, the NMC does not publish a country-wise approved list. Validity rests on two pillars: your university's listing in the World Directory of Medical Schools (WDOMS), and your course meeting the NMC's Foreign Medical Graduate Licentiate (FMGL) Regulations, 2021. Uzbekistan's established government universities — Tashkent State Medical University, Samarkand, Bukhara, Andijan, Tashkent Pediatric and their peers — are WDOMS-listed. Verify your specific faculty's entry on the WDOMS website yourself before paying a rupee; it takes two minutes and permanently settles the question.

The Five Conditions You Must Meet

  • NEET before admission. A qualifying NEET result from the eligibility window of your admission year. Join without it and your degree can never be registered in India — this is the sharpest edge in the entire rulebook.
  • Course duration and medium. Minimum 54 months of on-campus, English-medium study. Uzbekistan's six-year General Medicine programmes clear this comfortably.
  • Internship at the same university. At least 12 months of supervised internship at the institution that taught you. Uzbek programmes include it as year six — do not plan to "do internship elsewhere".
  • Host-country registration eligibility. You must be eligible for registration to practise where you studied; your university's graduation process covers this for its graduates.
  • One university, physically, start to finish. No mid-course transfers, no online semesters, no split campuses. Transfers are the single most common self-inflicted wound in this field.

After You Return: FMGE Today, NExT Tomorrow

Back in India, foreign graduates sit the FMGE screening (twice yearly) until the NExT transition completes — after which Indian and foreign graduates will face the same exit exam, arguably the fairest arrangement yet. Clear the screening, complete any required internship top-up, and register with your State Medical Council. From that day your Uzbek degree carries the same practising rights as any Indian MBBS.

What FMGE Pass Rates Really Tell You

You will see scary aggregate FMGE numbers (historically 20–40% per attempt) and miraculous university-specific claims. Both mislead. The aggregate blends serious students with unprepared ones and strong universities with weak ones; the miracle claims cherry-pick batches. The stable truth: students from government universities with real patient exposure — Uzbekistan's core offering — who prepare Indian-pattern MCQs from the middle years onward clear at rates far above the average. The university gives you the clinical foundation; the passing is built by four years of steady preparation, not four months of panic.

A Year-by-Year Compliance and Preparation Plan

  • Before admission: NEET qualified; WDOMS entry verified; offer letter and fee schedule archived.
  • Years 1–2: foundations (anatomy, physiology, biochemistry) done properly; every fee receipt and transcript filed at home in one folder.
  • Year 3: begin daily Indian-pattern MCQs alongside pathology and pharmacology.
  • Years 4–5: tie every hospital rotation to exam practice — see the case, solve its questions the same week. Keep passport entry/exit stamps safe; they evidence physical attendance.
  • Year 6: internship at your own university, two full revisions, timed mock series; book the first FMGE/NExT window after returning.
  • After passing: State Medical Council registration — a paperwork exercise if your folder is complete, an archaeology project if it is not.

The Family Archive: Build It From Day One

Registration day arrives six years after admission day, and it is fundamentally a documents examination. Maintain one physical folder and one cloud folder at home in India containing: the NEET admit card and scorecard, the university offer and admission letters, every fee receipt and SWIFT confirmation, each year's transcripts, scans of every passport page with entry/exit stamps, the invitation letter and visas, the internship completion certificate, and finally the apostilled degree. Add each document the week it is created — not in a scramble years later. Families who keep this archive describe FMGE-era registration as an afternoon of photocopying; families who do not describe it as months of chasing a university registry across time zones. It is the cheapest insurance in this entire journey.

Beyond India: Where Else the Degree Works

WDOMS listing makes Uzbek graduates eligible for ECFMG certification and the USMLE (USA) and the UK's PLAB/UKMLA pathway, subject to each body's current criteria. Plenty of Uzbekistan graduates route onward internationally; the degree is a passport with more pages than its price suggests. If global mobility is your primary driver, weigh the trade-offs against Turkey as well.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is any Uzbek university banned by the NMC?

The NMC bans practices, not countries. Validity is university-by-university via WDOMS and course structure — which is why we verify both in writing for every student before admission.

I joined without NEET on an agent's advice. Can it be fixed?

No. NEET must precede admission; there is no retroactive cure. If you are mid-course in this situation, get professional advice immediately — options exist but all involve restarting compliance, not patching it.

Does the NMC accept Uzbekistan's one-year internship?

Yes, as part of the FMGL-compliant structure — completed at your own university. Depending on prevailing rules you may still complete a supervised internship period in India after the screening exam; plan for it.

Will NExT disadvantage foreign graduates?

If anything the opposite: one common exam for everyone ends the two-track system. Preparation habits are identical; only the label changes.

How do I verify a university claim an agent makes?

WDOMS for the listing, the university's official site for fees and the English-medium intake, and a live video call with a current Indian student for everything else. Zenvia arranges all three before you commit — book a session.

Can I do postgraduate (PG) study abroad after an Uzbek MBBS?

Yes — the standard routes all remain open: NEET-PG in India after licensing, USMLE for US residency, or PG programmes in other countries subject to their entry rules. The degree's WDOMS foundation is what keeps every door on its hinges.

Does the year of my NEET attempt matter?

Yes — your qualifying NEET must fall within the eligibility window applicable to your admission year. When admission is deferred a year, re-confirm the window before enrolling rather than assuming the old score carries.

One Rule Above All the Others

If this entire guide compressed to a single sentence, it would be this: every validity problem in the MBBS-abroad world is created before admission, not after graduation. The student who joins with NEET qualified, at a WDOMS-verified faculty, on a full-length English-medium programme, has already won the recognition battle — everything after that is diligence. The student who joins without NEET, or via a "transfer-friendly" arrangement, or on a shortened course, has already lost it, whatever reassurances were sold alongside. Spend your scepticism before you pay; it purchases nothing afterwards.

Bottom line: Uzbekistan is a rules-clean, NMC-compatible destination — the students who stumble are the ones who skipped a rule, not the ones the rules failed. Before you pay any university or agent, have your case verified: book a free counselling session or contact Zenvia Education. Start-to-finish guidance lives in the complete Uzbekistan guide, the university comparison and the admission process guide.

Editorially reviewed MBBS abroad guidance for Indian students and parents.

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