This keyword is more commercial than a generic Vietnam destination page because families are already asking for the best options, not whether Vietnam exists as an MBBS destination. The useful version of a 'best universities' page should not be a random top-10 ranking. It should help Indian students understand which Vietnam universities deserve shortlist priority first and why.
Share your details and our team will suggest universities based on your NEET profile, budget, and country preference.
Shortlisted universities
This is a decision-first list, not a random ranking table. We are prioritizing universities that are easier to explain honestly to Indian families across cost, city, medium, and overall fit.
Use this table to compare university-level cost bands and medium before opening each detailed profile.
| University | City | Type | Tuition / year | Medium | Best fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Can Tho University of Medicine and Pharmacy Faculty of Medicine | Can Tho | Public | $5,000 | English | Students who want a public medical school with a stronger track record in southern Vietnam. |
| Hue University of Medicine and Pharmacy | Hue | Public | $4,500 | English, Local | Students who want a serious public medical school in central Vietnam. |
| Dai Nam University Faculty of Medicine | Hanoi | Private | $4,100 | English | Students who want a private Hanoi option without premium-tier pricing. |
| Dong A University College of Medicine | Da Nang | Private | $4,500 | English | Students who want a private Da Nang campus with a modern feel. |
| Phan Chau Trinh University | Da Nang | Private | $5,200 | English, Local | Students who want a distinctive private medical campus in Da Nang. |
| Buon Ma Thuot Medical University | Buon Ma Thuot | Private | $5,000 | English | Students open to a quieter regional-city experience. |
There is no single best option for every student. Can Tho and Hue often appeal to families who want stronger public-university comfort, while selected private universities can work well when student support, city preference, and practical admissions handling matter more.
No. A higher fee does not automatically mean a better fit. Some students do better with a more practical, support-friendly university in the right city than with a university that only sounds more premium on paper.
No. Rankings can help with discovery, but the final decision should come from fee planning, city comfort, medium clarity, and the full university profile, not from a top-10 article alone.
The strongest next move is to compare the Vietnam fee page and then open the individual university pages for the 2 to 4 options you are genuinely considering. That is where the shortlist becomes actionable.