
What YÖS Score is Needed to get into Medical School?
Medical school in Turkey is one of the most competitive choices for international students, so it’s normal to fixate on one question: What YÖS Score is Needed to get into Medical School in Turkey? The tricky part is that there isn’t one magic number that works everywhere, because “YÖS” can mean TR-YÖS (ÖSYM’s centralized exam) or a university’s own exam system, and each university sets its own rules.
In this guide, you’ll get realistic score ranges for 2025 to 2026, a simple way to set your personal target, and clear next steps if your score doesn’t reach medicine this year.
So, what YÖS score is needed to get into medical school? (Realistic 2025 to 2026 ranges)

Photo by Tara Winstead
For 2025 to 2026 admissions, you’ll see very different “minimums” depending on the exam type and the university. Based on published guides and recent admissions information, minimums can appear as roughly 80 to 325 in some systems, while highly competitive medicine placements often cluster around 400 to 470 on the TR-YÖS scale.
Here’s the key detail that prevents a lot of confusion: TR-YÖS scores are on a 100 to 500 scale, while some university YÖS results or internal thresholds may be shown on a 100-point scale. That’s how you can see numbers like 80 in some places and 325 in others, without them contradicting each other.
Typical minimum vs competitive scores: what “safe” looks like
Students often read a “minimum required score” and treat it like a pass line. For medicine, that mindset usually backfires, because the minimum is often just the lowest score the university says it will accept for an application, not the score that actually wins a seat.
A practical way to think about it:
- Minimum score: the lowest score that was accepted or allowed to apply in the last cycle.
- Competitive score: the score range most admitted students actually had, because quotas are tight.
If a faculty says “minimum 325,” it doesn’t mean 325 will get you in, it means you’re finally allowed to join the race. Think of it like arriving at the airport, you’re in the building, but you still need the right ticket.
A simple rule that stays realistic in most cases is to aim well above the minimum, especially if you want Istanbul, Ankara, or an English-medium medical program. In practice, many applicants treat 400+ (TR-YÖS) as the point where medicine becomes a serious possibility, and 430 to 470 as a stronger “safer” zone for highly demanded public universities.
Examples of how wide the range can be (from low to very high)
Medicine cutoffs don’t just vary, they can feel like different sports. Recent published minimums and expectations show that spread clearly:
- Some universities and guides may show minimum 80 (often on a 100-point style scale in certain YÖS systems).
- A public university example shows a 325/500 TR-YÖS minimum for medicine (Mersin University, in published admission guidance).
- Another example shows an even higher base line, such as 400/500 as a minimum (Gazi University, in published admission guidance).
- For very competitive placements, applicants commonly prepare for around 470/500 as a high-end target when competition peaks.
These examples aren’t promises, and they don’t guarantee admission, because each year’s applicant pool changes. They do show one important truth: there’s no single fixed cutoff for “medicine in Turkey.”
Why the required YÖS score for medicine changes so much
If you’ve seen two students with very different scores get very different results, it’s not luck alone. Medicine scores move up and down because universities control admissions rules, seats, and how they rank candidates, and those details shift from year to year.
The good news is you can control more than you think, especially your prep quality and your application strategy.
University rules, quotas for international students, and program language (Turkish vs English)
Medicine has limited seats for international students, and limited seats always push scores upward. When a quota is small, a few high scorers can raise the “last accepted” score quickly.
Program language also matters a lot:
- English-medium medicine usually attracts more applicants, so scores tend to rise.
- Turkish-medium medicine can still be very competitive, but demand may differ by city and university reputation.
Another major factor is exam acceptance. Since 2024 to 2025, TR-YÖS became a main centralized option for foreign student admissions, and many public universities rely on it. Some schools accept only TR-YÖS (or a defined list of exams), while others accept different exams or older results under conditions, so a score that works at one university may not even be usable at another.
Different scoring systems and conversions (TR-YÖS vs university exams)
Comparing scores across different exam types without checking conversions is a common mistake. An “80” can be strong in a 100-point system, while “325” belongs to a 500-point system. Even within TR-YÖS, universities may publish their own tables, ranking methods, or tie-break rules.
To avoid wrong comparisons, keep your score checks consistent:
- Compare TR-YÖS to TR-YÖS results only.
- Compare a university YÖS score only within that same exam and scale.
- Verify the university’s published method for evaluation, because small rule details can change rankings.
If you treat all “YÖS scores” as the same unit, you’ll end up targeting the wrong number.
How to set your personal target score and build a smart application list
A strong score helps, but a smart list protects you from surprises. Medicine admissions can turn into a crowded elevator, and you don’t want only one door to open.
The goal is simple: build an application plan that matches your score and reduces risk.
A simple targeting method: dream, match, safety score bands
Start by choosing three score targets, so you’re not guessing in the dark:
- Ideal target: the score that would make you competitive at your top choices.
- Realistic target: the score that fits several solid options in your list.
- Minimum acceptable target: the score that still keeps medicine possible, even if it’s not your top city.
Here’s a simple way to structure it for TR-YÖS, using the ranges students commonly plan around for 2025 to 2026:
| Score Band (TR-YÖS / 500) | What it usually means for medicine | How to use it in your list |
|---|---|---|
| 430 to 470 | Strong for highly competitive public options in top cities | “Dream” schools, plus a few matches |
| 380 to 430 | Competitive in many cases, depends on quota and language | Core “match” schools across several cities |
| 325 to 380 | Meets some minimums, but admission can be fragile | “Safety” options, consider less competitive cities |
If you’re working with a 100-point YÖS scale instead, you can think in a similar pattern (for example, low 80s as minimum territory, 90+ as highly competitive territory), but only after confirming the university’s scoring scale.
A balanced list usually includes different cities and at least one option that is less crowded than Istanbul or Ankara, because demand alone can raise the score needed.
What to do if your score is not enough for medicine this year
If your score falls short, it doesn’t mean the goal is over, it means the plan needs an upgrade. Medicine rewards persistence, but it also rewards students who change what isn’t working.
Practical options that keep you moving forward:
- Retake TR-YÖS with a tighter plan, focusing on math and logic fundamentals, plus timed practice, because speed is often the hidden limiter.
- Widen your city choices, since demand differences can change outcomes even with the same score.
- Consider related health fields for one year if it supports your long-term path, then re-apply with stronger results.
- Check foundation (private) universities, because some have different admission rules and may be more flexible, although tuition and language requirements can change the picture.
Also remember that TR-YÖS results are valid for a defined period (often two years in published guidance), so planning your exam timing and your application year matters. ÖSYM publishes exam dates in its official calendar, so you should confirm the current schedule before you commit to a retake plan.
Conclusion
There’s no single answer to “YÖS kaç puanla tıp kazanılır,” because the needed score depends on the university, the exam type, the quota, and the competition in that year. For 2025 to 2026, realistic planning often sits between roughly 80 to 325 as minimum thresholds in some systems, while competitive TR-YÖS outcomes for medicine commonly push toward 400 to 470. Choose a clear target score, build a dream-match-safety list, and verify each university’s current rules before applying, because the details decide the result. If your score isn’t enough this year, treat it as feedback, then come back stronger with a smarter plan.
Etiket:admission, Avrupa'da Tıp