1. What Is NExT?
The National Exit Test (NExT) is India's new single medical licensing examination, introduced by the National Medical Commission. When fully implemented, NExT replaces the Final MBBS Part II examination as the gateway to medical registration in India. Every doctor wishing to practice medicine in India — whether they graduated from an Indian college or abroad — must pass NExT.
NExT is the most significant reform to India's medical licensing architecture since independence. It creates a uniform exit standard across the entire country, meaning that a doctor graduating from a government medical college in Bihar and one from a private deemed university in Karnataka are assessed against the identical competency benchmark before receiving their licence to practice.
2. Why India Introduced NExT
The motivation for NExT stemmed from a long-standing problem: the quality of MBBS graduates varied dramatically across India's 816 medical colleges. A student from a well-resourced institution with strong clinical exposure and rigorous internal assessment was graduating with the same degree — and the same right to practice — as a student from an institution that barely met minimum infrastructure standards.
Patients had no reliable signal of competence. Employers in government hospitals, private hospitals, and international organisations had no common reference point. The old system produced a degree — not a demonstrated standard of clinical competence. NExT changes this fundamentally.
3. NExT Step 1 — The Theory Examination
Theory-Based MCQ Examination
Covers all clinical subjects from Phase III of the MBBS curriculum. Taken after completing Phase III Part 1. Multiple choice question format with a focus on clinical application and reasoning — not factual recall. Passing NExT Step 1 is required before sitting for NExT Step 2.
Clinical Skills Examination
OSCE (Objective Structured Clinical Examination) and structured clinical encounters. Assesses hands-on clinical competency — history taking, clinical examination, diagnosis, patient management, and communication. Taken at the end of internship. Passing NExT Step 2 grants registration to practice medicine in India.
Both steps are administered by the National Board of Examinations (NBE) in collaboration with the NMC. The examination centres will be distributed across India to ensure access for students from all states and union territories.
4. NExT and NEET-PG
One of the most significant implications of NExT is its dual function: it is both the medical licensing examination and the PG admission examination. The NExT Step 1 score replaces NEET-PG as the basis for allocation to postgraduate MD/MS programmes across India.
This creates a powerful alignment of incentives. Students preparing for PG entrance are simultaneously preparing for their medical licence — and both are now tested against the NMC's CBME competency framework. The days of treating PG entrance preparation as entirely separate from MBBS clinical training are over.
NExT will make institutional pass rates publicly visible at the national level for the first time. A college whose students consistently underperform in NExT will face regulatory scrutiny, reputational damage, and reduced student demand. This accountability is unprecedented in Indian medical education.
5. Foreign Medical Graduates and NExT
Foreign Medical Graduates (FMGs) — Indian citizens who completed MBBS from recognised universities outside India — must also pass NExT to obtain Indian medical registration. This replaces the previous Foreign Medical Graduate Examination (FMGE / MCI Screening Test) and applies the same standard to all doctors seeking to practice in India regardless of where they trained.
6. How CBME Training Directly Prepares Students for NExT
The NMC's design of NExT is not separate from CBME — it is the terminal assessment of everything CBME builds. Students trained under the CBME curriculum are systematically better prepared for NExT than those who studied under the old rote-memorisation model:
- NExT Step 1 is application-based: The MCQs test clinical reasoning, differential diagnosis, and management decisions — exactly what CBME's Know How and Show How competencies develop.
- NExT Step 2 is competency-based: The clinical skills assessment directly tests the procedures and patient interactions documented in the CBME logbook — observed, assisted, and performed under supervision.
- AETCOM prepares for Step 2 communication stations: Communication skills, ethics scenarios, and breaking bad news are formal NExT Step 2 stations — and AETCOM is the only part of MBBS that formally trains and assesses these.
- Regular formative assessment builds test readiness: CBME's mandatory internal assessments every three to four months mean students are continuously assessed — not cramming for a single annual paper.
7. What Medical Colleges Must Do to Prepare Students
Medical colleges that want their students to perform well in NExT need to take the following steps in 2026:
- Complete the CBME logbook rigorously: Every competency logged and signed off is direct preparation for NExT Step 2 clinical skills.
- Strengthen OSCE practice: Regular mock OSCE sessions from Phase III onward are the most direct preparation for the NExT Step 2 format.
- Build a structured MCQ question bank: AI-generated, NMC competency-aligned MCQs give students continuous practice with the reasoning-based format NExT Step 1 demands.
- Track and remediate formative assessment gaps: Students who consistently underperform in specific competency domains during internal assessments need targeted support well before NExT — not last-minute coaching.
- Use clinical simulation: Simulation-based training for procedures and clinical decision-making builds the confidence and skill required for NExT Step 2 performance stations.
8. 2026 and Beyond — NExT's Evolving Impact
In 2026, NExT has already changed how progressive medical colleges in India approach curriculum delivery. By 2028, the full ecosystem — universal NExT implementation, AI-assisted preparation platforms, competency-linked question banks, and OSCE training infrastructure — will be the standard operating environment for every Indian medical college.
The colleges that are investing in CBME implementation tools, digital logbooks, and AI-powered learning platforms today are building the exact infrastructure that will underpin NExT success for their students for the next decade.
EdMedAI's AI Question Bank — with NMC competency-aligned MCQs at three difficulty levels — gives students structured NExT Step 1 preparation embedded in their daily CBME learning. Clinical simulations build NExT Step 2 readiness. Request a demo →