FMGE Subject-wise Weightage & High-Yield Topics (2026)
FMGE 2026 subject-wise weightage and high-yield topics: which subjects to prioritise, the high-yield areas inside each, and how to allocate study time for a 50% qualifying exam.
FMGE 2026 subject-wise weightage and high-yield topics: which subjects to prioritise, the high-yield areas inside each, and how to allocate study time for a 50% qualifying exam.

Version 1.0 — Published June 2026
To prioritise correctly for FMGE 2026 (you need 150 of 300, exactly 50%), spend your study time in this order:
The governing principle: for a 50% qualifier, reliable breadth of high-yield basics across every subject beats deep knowledge of a niche corner. NBEMS does not publish official per-subject counts, so treat all weightage as approximate — and aim to be comfortably strong everywhere rather than brilliant in one place.
FMGE is a 300-question, single-best-answer MCQ exam conducted by the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS), qualifying at 150 out of 300 — exactly 50% — with no negative marking. It draws on the shared Indian MBBS syllabus, so every subject you studied in medical school is fair game. What matters for planning is not an official tally but relative weightage: which subjects reliably contribute more questions, so you can allocate time by yield rather than spreading it evenly.
A crucial caveat up front: NBEMS does not publish an official per-subject question breakdown for FMGE. Any subject-wise weightage — including everything in this guide — is an approximate, relative estimate based on the MBBS syllabus and observed patterns across sittings, not a guaranteed count. Use it to set priorities, never as a promise that a subject will deliver a fixed number of marks. The reliable strategy is to be strong across all high-yield subjects, so that the exact distribution on your sitting does not matter.
Because the pass mark is a fixed 50% and there is no negative marking, your job is mathematically simple: convert reliable high-yield knowledge into marks across all 300 questions, and attempt every one. That structure makes weightage-aware prioritisation the single most useful planning tool you have — it tells you where each study hour buys the most marks.
The table below groups FMGE subjects into yield bands so you can see at a glance where to concentrate. "Relative yield" is approximate and reflects how reliably each subject contributes marks across sittings — not an official NBEMS count.
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Start Free Practice| Subject block | Subjects | Relative yield |
|---|---|---|
| High-yield clinical | Medicine, Surgery, OBG | High |
| High-yield clinical | Pediatrics | Moderate–High |
| High-yield para-clinical | PSM, Pharmacology, Pathology | High |
| High-yield para-clinical | Microbiology, Forensic Medicine | Moderate–High |
| Pre-clinical | Anatomy, Physiology, Biochemistry | Lower |
| Specialty | Ophthalmology, ENT, Orthopedics, Anesthesia, Dermatology, Psychiatry, Radiology | Lower (focused) |
Read this table as a priority map, not a question count. The two "High" bands — the clinical and para-clinical blocks — should receive the largest share of your timetable, because that is where reliable effort converts into the most marks. The lower bands are tested and must not be ignored, but they reward a quick, efficient high-yield pass rather than deep study.
The clinical block is the highest-yield part of FMGE — Medicine, Surgery, and Obstetrics & Gynaecology together carry a large share of the paper, with Pediatrics adding a meaningful block on top. These subjects reward recognising common presentations and committing the first-line management to memory, because that is exactly what the qualifying exam tests.
Medicine is the single largest clinical contributor and the backbone of a passing score. High-yield topics:
Surgery rewards pattern recognition of common conditions and their management logic. High-yield topics:
Obstetrics & Gynaecology (OBG) is a reliable, high-frequency clinical subject. High-yield topics:
Pediatrics carries a meaningful, recurring share and overlaps heavily with Medicine and PSM. High-yield topics:
Across this block, the winning move is breadth of the common, repeated presentations — not deep coverage of rare syndromes. A candidate fluent in the everyday clinical material clears comfortably.
The para-clinical block is where the most efficient marks live, because much of it is fact-based and concept-based rather than open-ended — and PSM in particular is one of the highest-yield, most scoring subjects in FMGE relative to the effort required.
Preventive & Social Medicine (PSM) is fact-dense, stable year to year, and reliably scoring — treat it as a priority, not an afterthought. High-yield topics:
Pharmacology rewards mechanism-based understanding that transfers directly into clinical vignettes. High-yield topics:
Pathology is the conceptual bridge into clinical reasoning, so the effort compounds. High-yield topics:
Microbiology is meaningfully tested and pairs naturally with Medicine. High-yield topics:
Forensic Medicine is a compact, high-return subject because its content is finite and frequently repeated. High-yield topics:
The theme in this block is leverage: PSM and Forensic Medicine are small to master yet reliably scoring, while Pharmacology and Pathology pay off twice by feeding into the clinical subjects.
The pre-clinical and specialty subjects are genuinely tested but carry smaller, more focused shares — so they reward an efficient high-yield pass rather than deep study. Over-investing here is the classic way candidates run out of time for the high-yield block that actually decides the result.
Pre-clinical subjects — Anatomy, Physiology, and Biochemistry — should be studied through a clinically applied lens:
Specialty subjects each carry a focused, smaller share — cover the common, repeated topics and move on:
The principle is identical to the rest of the exam: a quick, reliable pass over the high-yield fundamentals of each of these subjects is worth far more than deep study of any single one. Depth in a niche specialty topic adds at most a mark or two; a gap in a high-yield clinical subject can cost several.
The right FMGE time allocation mirrors the yield bands: the largest share to the high-yield clinical and para-clinical blocks, a moderate share to the second tier, and a smaller, targeted share to pre-clinical and specialty subjects. Allocating evenly across all subjects is the most common planning mistake — it under-serves the subjects that decide your result.
| Priority tier | Subjects | Suggested share of time |
|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 (most time) | Medicine, Surgery, OBG, PSM, Pharmacology, Pathology | Largest share |
| Tier 2 (solid share) | Pediatrics, Microbiology, Forensic Medicine | Moderate share |
| Tier 3 (efficient pass) | Anatomy, Physiology, Biochemistry, and all specialty subjects | Smaller, targeted share |
Three rules turn this table into a plan. First, never let a Tier 1 subject stay weak — a gap in Medicine or PSM costs far more than perfection in a specialty subject. Second, exploit the overlaps: the immunisation schedule serves PSM, Pediatrics, and Microbiology, so revising it once pays three times. Third, let analytics, not feel, decide where you are weak — candidates routinely over-study a subject they enjoy and under-study a high-yield subject they find dull (PSM is the usual victim). Audit your per-subject accuracy and rebalance toward the weak high-yield subjects, not the comfortable ones.
For the full phased plan that sits on top of this allocation, see the complete FMGE preparation guide, and for the week-by-week execution see the FMGE study plan and strategy walkthrough.
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The question bank, subject-wise practice, analytics, and mock tests are free for every registered user; the AI tutor and a few advanced tools are part of the Pro plan, which covers FMGE, NEET PG, and INI-CET together. To start a weightage-aware FMGE preparation from day one, begin on the FMGE preparation hub.
Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics & Gynaecology, PSM, Pharmacology, and Pathology are the relatively highest-yield subjects in FMGE — together they account for the bulk of the 300 questions. Pediatrics, Microbiology, and Forensic Medicine are also meaningfully tested. Exact per-subject counts vary by sitting and are not officially published, so treat all weightage as approximate and prioritise the high-yield block first.
Yes. Preventive and Social Medicine (PSM) is consistently one of the most scoring subjects in FMGE relative to the effort it takes, because much of it is fact-based and stable year to year. National health programmes, the immunisation schedule, epidemiology, biostatistics, and vital statistics repeat across sittings. Many candidates underrate PSM as boring and leave easy marks on the table.
Pre-clinical Anatomy, Physiology, and Biochemistry are tested but generally carry fewer marks than the clinical and para-clinical block, so they should not consume a disproportionate share of your timetable. Cover the high-yield applied basics — clinically relevant anatomy, key physiology concepts, common metabolic pathways — rather than trying to master every detail. Reliable breadth beats deep niche coverage for a 50% qualifier.
Weight your time by yield. Give the largest share to the high-yield clinical and para-clinical block (Medicine, Surgery, OBG, PSM, Pharmacology, Pathology), a moderate share to Pediatrics, Microbiology, and Forensic Medicine, and a smaller, targeted share to pre-clinical and specialty subjects. The principle for a 50% qualifying exam is simple: secure reliable high-yield breadth across every subject before adding depth anywhere.
Focus on drug mechanisms, drugs of choice for common conditions, signature adverse drug reactions, and the major enzyme inducers and inhibitors. These themes are concept-based, repeat across sittings, and transfer directly into clinical vignettes in Medicine and Surgery. Pharmacology rewards understanding mechanisms over rote drug lists, which makes it efficient to revise close to the exam.
Specialty subjects — Ophthalmology, ENT, Orthopedics, Anesthesia, Dermatology, Psychiatry, and Radiology — each carry a focused, smaller share of questions. They are worth a quick, high-yield pass for the common, repeated topics, but they should not be prioritised over the high-yield clinical and para-clinical block. Cover their fundamentals efficiently and move on; depth here adds little to a qualifying score.
No. NBEMS does not publish an official per-subject question count for FMGE, so any subject-wise weightage you see — including ours — is an approximate, relative estimate based on the shared MBBS syllabus and observed patterns. Use weightage to set priorities, not as a guarantee of exact counts. The reliable strategy is to be strong across all high-yield subjects rather than to game a specific tally.
No. FMGE is a 50% qualifying exam, while NEET PG is a competitive ranked exam where the same score would place you poorly. For FMGE, weight your time toward reliable high-yield basics across all subjects. For NEET PG, you add depth, speed, and recent advances on top of that foundation. The subjects overlap, but the intensity and the topics you can safely skip differ.
Track per-subject accuracy across timed practice and full-length mocks. If you are reliably scoring above the 50% line in mixed FMGE-pattern tests — and not failing badly in any single high-yield subject — your breadth is on track. The danger sign is strong scores in one or two subjects masking a weak high-yield subject; even out the weak spots before adding depth anywhere.
NEETPGAI gives you a free MCQ bank with explanations, subject-wise practice so you can drill one high-yield subject at a time, analytics that flag weak high-yield subjects before exam day, and FMGE-pattern mocks of 300 questions with no negative marking. The basics-first AI tutor frames answers around must-pass fundamentals; Pro covers FMGE, NEET PG, and INI-CET together. Start your free FMGE preparation now →
Prioritise by weightage from day one. For a 50% qualifying exam, the candidate who secures high-yield breadth across every subject clears comfortably — and the cheapest time to fix a weak high-yield subject is now, not in the final week. Compare plans on the pricing page or begin on the FMGE hub.
Written by: NEETPGAI Editorial Team Reviewed by: NEETPGAI Medical Advisory Board Last reviewed: June 2026
Subject-wise weightage for FMGE is approximate and relative — the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) does not publish an official per-subject question breakdown, and the exam pattern, passing marks, and eligibility rules summarised here are drawn from the National Medical Commission (NMC) and NBEMS. Always verify your cohort's specific requirements on the official NMC and NBEMS portals before planning. This article is reviewed for accuracy and exam relevance. For corrections or updates, contact the editorial team.