PMDC announces closure of admissions for academic session 2025–2026

Published April 30, 2026 Updated April 30, 2026 01:41pm
Pakistan Medical and Dental Council's building. — APP/File
Pakistan Medical and Dental Council's building. — APP/File

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PMDC) announced on Thursday that admissions for the 2025–2026 academic session have been closed, and students admitted after April 15 will not be registered.

A notification issued by the council said all recognised medical and dental colleges have been directed not to grant admissions after the closing date.

PMDC further clarified that any admission granted beyond the stipulated deadline would constitute a violation of the PMDC Act, 2022, and the relevant regulations governing undergraduate medical and dental education. Consequently, such students will not be issued registration numbers, rendering their admissions invalid.

The directive has been issued with the approval of the competent authority and is binding on all institutions and admitting universities across the country.

The council also urged all stakeholders to ensure strict compliance with the regulations to maintain transparency, merit, and standardisation in medical and dental education.

On April 8, PMDC stated that universities could permit a one-time relaxation of up to three per cent in the MDCAT passing requirement for admissions to medical and dental colleges, aimed at filling vacant seats for the 2025–26 academic session.

The notification stated that the decision had been made solely to fill vacant seats, “ensuring strict merit-based transparency and institutional accountability by the admitting universities, with the admission process for these vacant seats to be monitored accordingly.”

Later, the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA) expressed strong disappointment over the council’s decision and called for the immediate withdrawal of the notification.

The association argued that seats remain vacant not due to a shortage of qualified candidates, but because of prohibitive fee structures.

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