Calculate your MDCAT aggregate for medical and dental college admissions using the standard PMC formula: 10% Matric + 40% FSc + 50% MDCAT. Used by UHS, PMC, and most public medical colleges across Pakistan.
The Pakistan Medical Commission (PMC) uses a standardized aggregate formula for admission to MBBS, BDS, and other medical programs across Pakistan. This formula combines your Matric, FSc (Pre-Medical), and MDCAT scores with specific weightages.
Standard PMC Formula:
Formula: Aggregate = (Matric Obtained / Matric Total × 10) + (FSc Obtained / FSc Total × 40) + (MDCAT Obtained / MDCAT Total × 50)
Suppose a student has the following scores:
Aggregate = (86.36 × 0.10) + (92.73 × 0.40) + (90.00 × 0.50)
= 8.64 + 37.09 + 45.00 = 90.73%
With a 90.73% aggregate, this student has a strong chance of admission to top government medical colleges.
Your MDCAT aggregate determines which medical colleges you are eligible for. While cut-offs change each year based on competition, here are general merit ranges based on recent admission trends in Pakistan:
Since MDCAT carries 50% weightage, scoring well on the entry test is the most impactful way to boost your aggregate. Focus on high-yield subjects like Biology (68 MCQs) and Chemistry (54 MCQs) during your preparation.
The standard PMC formula is: Aggregate = (Matric marks / Total × 10) + (FSc marks / Total × 40) + (MDCAT marks / Total × 50). This gives 10% weightage to Matric, 40% to FSc, and 50% to the MDCAT entry test.
The MDCAT exam consists of 200 MCQs worth 1 mark each, making the total 200 marks. However, the total can vary — some years it has been 180. Check the PMC official website for the latest exam structure.
Above 90% gives a strong chance for top government medical colleges like King Edward, Allama Iqbal, and Dow. 85-89% is competitive for most public colleges. Below 85% may qualify for private medical colleges on merit or self-finance seats.
The standard PMC formula (10-40-50) is used across Pakistan for PMC-regulated admissions. However, some provinces or universities like NUMS may use different weightages (e.g., 50% FSc + 50% MDCAT without Matric). Always verify with the specific institution.
Yes. A-Level students should use their IBCC equivalence marks. The IBCC issues an equivalence certificate converting A-Level grades to marks out of 1100. Use those converted marks in this calculator.