TAPMI Waitlist Movement 2026: Core, BKFS, Marketing, HRM & IB Past Trends
A research-backed, student-friendly guide to TAPMI waitlist movement based on official admissions structure, official program context, and publicly tracked historical patterns across MBA Core, BKFS, Marketing, HRM and IB.
Quick takeaway
TAPMI waitlist movement often looks scary at first, but Core and some specialized programs can still move meaningfully because of overlap, payment deadlines, and later churn.
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TAPMI waitlist movement is one of the most misunderstood topics in MBA admissions. Every year, many candidates panic after seeing large waitlist numbers, especially for MBA Core, BKFS, Marketing, HRM, and IB. But TAPMI’s admission structure works a little differently from many other institutes: the shortlist and merit list for each program are separate and independent, which means the same candidate can hold more than one TAPMI offer at the same time. That alone creates more movement than many applicants initially expect.
This page is designed to give aspirants a more realistic picture of how TAPMI waitlist movement usually behaves, what the public trend suggests for each course, and how to interpret your own waitlist number without either false hope or unnecessary panic. The goal here is not to sell fantasy. The goal is to separate official structure, publicly traceable numbers, and reasonable estimates.
- TAPMI’s official admissions structure
- Official recent program-size context from placement data
- Public waitlist-tracking discussions and repeated candidate observations
- Cautious estimation where final official closure data is not publicly available
Why TAPMI waitlist movement can be higher than expected
1) Separate merit lists for each program
TAPMI clearly states that each MBA program has its own separate shortlist and merit list. So a student can be selected or waitlisted differently across Core, BKFS, Marketing, HRM, IB, and other programs.
2) Multi-program overlap
TAPMI’s application structure allows candidates to apply across multiple programs. That creates overlap offers. In public discussion, candidates repeatedly mention that one person may hold Core, Marketing, and BKFS simultaneously, and when that person accepts one or leaves TAPMI for another college, movement happens in more than one list.
3) Post-IIM / post-peer-college churn
Public candidate tracking suggests that movement is often strongest in the early round because of internal overlap, slows for a while, and then can pick up again after IIM CAP or other major private B-school results.
Why all TAPMI programs should not be judged the same way
Aspirants often make the mistake of assuming every TAPMI program will show similar waitlist behaviour. That is usually not true. One major reason is program size. The official 2025 placement report for the 2023–25 graduating batch shows meaningful differences in batch size, and that affects how movement looks in public tracking.
| Program | Recent official batch size context | What it usually means for waitlist movement |
|---|---|---|
| MBA Core / General | 350 | Larger batch, broader movement, more overlap-driven churn |
| MBA BKFS | 59 | Smaller batch, but can still show sharp movement in individual rounds |
| MBA Marketing | 51 | Often healthier movement than many students initially expect |
| MBA HRM | 44 | Can move steadily, but often slower than Core |
| MBA IB | 25 | Bursty movement possible; smaller batch makes clean prediction harder |
These batch sizes are used here as context, not as a direct formula for conversion.
What usually helps movement
- Multiple TAPMI program applications
- Payment deadline drop-offs
- Better converts elsewhere
- Late withdrawals and churn
What makes prediction harder
- No official final public closure table every year
- Different batch sizes by program
- Round-to-round non-linear jumps
- Changing competition each cycle
Historical TAPMI waitlist movement table: 2024–26
This is the most useful historical comparison point available in public discussions. MBA Core for 2024–26 is the strongest row in public evidence. The specialization rows are widely repeated in public discussions and coaching articles, but they should still be treated as reconstructed public history, not an official TAPMI release. BKFS is the weakest row because a clean first-list-to-final-list pair is not publicly traceable with the same confidence as Core.
| Program | First visible waitlist no. | Last visible / reconstructed waitlist no. | Total movement | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBA Core | 1457 | 956 | 501 | Medium-High |
| MBA Marketing | 629 | 479 | 150 | Low-Medium |
| MBA HRM | 329 | 199 | 130 | Low-Medium |
| MBA IB | 270 | 150 | 120 | Low-Medium |
| MBA BKFS | — | — | ~175–225 | Low |
Observed / estimated TAPMI waitlist trend table: 2025–27
For the 2025–27 batch, it is better to use broad bands rather than fake precision. The public evidence is more useful for direction than for exact final closure totals.
| Program | Observed / estimated total movement band | Confidence | Practical reading |
|---|---|---|---|
| MBA Core | ~200–400 | Low-Medium | Live if your number is reasonable |
| MBA Marketing | ~200–400 | Low | Better movement than many expect |
| MBA HRM | ~150–250 | Low | Slower than Core, but not dead |
| MBA BKFS | ~180–220 | Low-Medium | Around 200 is a fair working estimate |
| MBA IB | ~200–300 | Low | Can move in bursts |
Blended counselling table: what your TAPMI waitlist number roughly means
This next table is an inference, not institute data. It blends the stronger 2024–26 anchor with the more approximate 2025–27 pattern and the program-size context. Use it as a practical counselling tool, not as a promise.
| Program | Strong zone | Realistic zone | Borderline zone | Tough zone |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBA Core | 1–250 | 251–400 | 401–550 | 550+ |
| MBA Marketing | 1–125 | 126–225 | 226–325 | 325+ |
| MBA HRM | 1–100 | 101–180 | 181–250 | 250+ |
| MBA BKFS | 1–120 | 121–200 | 201–250 | 250+ |
| MBA IB | 1–100 | 101–180 | 181–250 | 250+ |
The biggest mistake aspirants make
The biggest mistake is treating TAPMI waitlist movement like a single straight-line prediction. That is not how it works.
At TAPMI, movement is often influenced by overlap across multiple TAPMI programs, other private B-school results, IIM CAP and related result timing, payment deadlines, and late withdrawals. So a candidate sitting at a number that looks “too high” in April may still be alive in May, while another candidate with a better-looking number in a smaller program may see slower movement than expected. Program matters. Timing matters. Market sentiment matters.
Should you track new TAPMI programs the same way?
No. It is better not to mix MBA Technology Management or MBA AI & DS into the same historical trend table yet. Public waitlist evidence for newer programs is still far thinner than Core, BKFS, Marketing, HRM, and IB.
Final verdict
TAPMI is one of those colleges where raw waitlist numbers can look scary but still remain convertible, especially in Core and in programs where overlap-driven movement is high. But not every viral table on the internet deserves equal trust.
The safest way to read TAPMI movement is:
- Trust the official admission structure.
- Use public historical numbers cautiously.
- Treat specialization figures as estimates, not official closure reports.
- Avoid taking a final decision based on one screenshot or one comment alone.
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FAQs on TAPMI waitlist movement
Does TAPMI have a separate waitlist for each program?
Why does TAPMI waitlist movement look bigger than some peer colleges?
Which TAPMI program historically shows the strongest public waitlist anchor?
Is BKFS waitlist movement dead because it is a smaller batch?
Are the tables in this blog official TAPMI data?
Should I track newer TAPMI programs the same way as Core, BKFS, Marketing, HRM and IB?
AzuCATion creates data-backed MBA admissions analysis, call prediction insights, shortlist decoding, and B-school decision-support content for serious aspirants.
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Editorial note: This page is built to help aspirants make calmer, more informed decisions. It should not be treated as an official TAPMI admissions notice.
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