Delhi HC Upholds Conversion of SC Women Quota to General in NEET Counselling
In a recent verdict, the Delhi High Court dismissed a petition challenging the conversion of unfilled SC women quota seats to general category during NEET counselling. The court emphasized that the process adhered to the established norms of medical seat allocation and did not violate reservation policies. This decision impacts thousands of MBBS aspirants across the country.

The Delhi High Court has rejected a plea seeking the reversal of the conversion of SC women quota seats into the general category during the NEET UG counselling process. This legal development comes amid growing concerns over fair reservation practices in medical admissions. The petitioner had argued that converting these reserved seats undermined the rights of eligible SC women candidates, but the court maintained that the seat conversion was executed within the legal framework.
Background of the Quota Conversion Issue
The issue stemmed from the conversion of unfilled Scheduled Caste (SC) women seats
During the final NEET UG counselling round, these seats were moved to the general pool
The petition challenged this action as discriminatory and against the spirit of reservation policy
Authorities responded by stating that the conversion was in line with standard guidelines
This practice is used routinely to avoid wastage of seats in professional medical courses
Court’s Justification and Legal Standpoint
The Delhi High Court bench found no illegality in the seat conversion
The court upheld that merit-based allocation takes precedence when no reserved category candidate is available
The decision ensured optimal use of seats for MBBS aspirants across India
The judgment reinforces that counselling authorities acted in accordance with existing rules
The court also clarified that the aim of NEET counselling is seat utilization, not reservation rigidity
Impact on Medical Aspirants and Counselling Dynamics
The ruling directly affects seat distribution patterns in NEET UG counselling rounds
Future counselling processes may continue using similar conversion protocols
It stresses the importance of timely application and participation by reserved category candidates
Students and parents must remain informed about category-specific seat norms
The verdict supports transparent and efficient medical admission procedures
Conclusion
The Delhi High Court's verdict highlights the legal backing for converting unfilled reserved seats to the general category in order to ensure maximum utilization. This decision underlines the balance between reservation policies and efficient seat allocation in India’s competitive medical education system.