Know Exactly What You're Walking Into
Before you can strategise, understand the structure cold. The NTA NEET UG 2026 exam follows this exact pattern, confirmed in the official information bulletin:
| Subject | Questions | Marks | Suggested Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biology (Botany + Zoology) | 90 | 360 | 65–70 min |
| Chemistry | 45 | 180 | 45–50 min |
| Physics | 45 | 180 | 45–50 min |
| Total | 180 | 720 | 180 min |
+4 marks for each correct answer · −1 mark for each wrong answer · 0 marks for unattempted. All 180 questions are compulsory — there are no optional sections in NEET 2026. Source: neet.nta.nic.in
What To Study in the Last 3 Days
The single most important rule: do not attempt any new chapter. Your memory is not a sponge at this stage — it's a filing system. Your job now is to access what's already filed, not add new drawers.
NEET consistently sets 85–90% of Biology questions directly from NCERT text — sometimes word-for-word. The difference between a government seat and a private seat often comes down to 4–5 NCERT lines. See our Biology Revision Guide for chapter-wise priority.
The Rules That Actually Matter
✓ Do This
- Sleep 7–8 hours — especially the night of 2nd May
- Eat light, familiar, home-cooked food only
- Pack your bag and clothes tonight
- Confirm your exam centre route on Google Maps
- Keep admit card and ID in a clear folder
- Revise only your own notes and formula sheets
- Solve 20–30 short questions daily for exam-mode warm-up
- Talk to supportive, calm people around you
✗ Avoid This
- Starting any new chapter from scratch
- All-nighters (memory retrieval crashes when exhausted)
- Social media posts claiming "NEET paper leaked"
- Discussing anxiety with panicking friends
- Heavy, spicy, or outside food before the exam
- 6-hour "last minute marathon" YouTube videos
- Changing your study environment drastically
- Comparing your preparation with others
Exam Day: Official Timing & Entry Rules
The NEET 2026 exam runs from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM. Entry gates open at 11:00 AM and close strictly at 1:30 PM — no entry is permitted after this. Always check your individual admit card at neet.nta.nic.in.
| Time | Activity |
|---|---|
| 11:00 AM | Entry gates open at exam centre |
| 1:00 PM | Recommended arrival (allows buffer for frisking queues) |
| 1:30 PM | Gates close — absolutely no entry permitted after this |
| 2:00 PM | Exam begins |
| 5:00 PM | Exam ends (3 hours total) |
If you arrive after 1:30 PM, entry is not permitted under any circumstances. Plan to reach the centre by 1:00 PM at the latest, accounting for traffic and security. Confirm your route the evening before.
NTA Dress Code — What You Must Wear
NTA has issued mandatory dress code guidelines for NEET UG 2026. Non-compliance can mean delayed entry or denial of entry. All rules are sourced from the official NTA information bulletin.
✓ Allowed
- Half-sleeve light, simple clothing (strongly preferred)
- Half-sleeve shirt or T-shirt (boys)
- Half-sleeve kurta or top with simple trousers/salwar (girls)
- Slippers or low-heel sandals
- Hijab, turban, religious attire — report 1 hour earlier
✗ Prohibited
- Full sleeves or heavy layered clothing
- Shoes or any closed footwear
- All jewellery — rings, chains, earrings, bangles
- All watches — analog and smartwatch both banned
- Clothes with embroidery, large buttons, zips, badges
- Metal hair accessories or clips
Candidates in customary/religious attire must report at least one hour before gate closing time (i.e., by 12:30 PM) for thorough frisking. This must have been declared during the application. Source: Careers360 · NTA Bulletin.
What to Carry — Pack Tonight
Pack everything below tonight (April 30) so exam morning is stress-free. Tap each item to tick it off:
📦 Complete Exam Day Checklist
- NEET UG 2026 Admit Card — printed clearly (download from neet.nta.nic.in)
- Original Government Photo ID — Aadhaar, PAN, Passport, Voter ID, or Driving Licence
- Passport-size photographs — 2 to 3 extras, identical to those uploaded during registration
- Blue or black ballpoint pen — NTA provides pens at centre but carry a spare
- Transparent water bottle (no labels) — check your centre's specific rules
- Light snack (banana or biscuits) in an open, transparent wrapper
- Half-sleeve outfit + low-heel slippers or sandals ready (no shoes, no jewellery, no watch)
- Printed or saved exam centre address + confirmed travel route
- Emergency contact numbers written on paper (phone stays outside)
- Two alarm clocks set for exam morning — phone alarm + a backup
Inside the Hall: 3-Hour Execution Plan
The Skip-and-Return Method
Never spend more than 90 seconds on any single question during your first pass. If you're stuck:
- 1Circle the question number on the question paper and move on immediately
- 2Do not leave any OMR bubble permanently blank — return before submitting
- 3Second-pass questions you were stuck on often feel clearer with fresh eyes
- 4Before guessing, eliminate at least 2 options — this makes the guess mathematically worthwhile
- 5Reserve 10–15 minutes at the end to revisit all marked questions
Negative marking is only −1. If you've confidently eliminated 2 out of 4 options, the expected value of guessing is positive. Never leave a question blank where you've done partial elimination. But don't blindly guess on questions you've never studied.
Managing Anxiety in the Hall
If you feel panic building mid-exam: put your pen down for 30 seconds. Take 3 slow, deep breaths. Remind yourself that the preparation happened. This feeling is normal and passes in under a minute. Then pick up the pen and continue with the very next question. Students who score well aren't the ones with zero anxiety — they're the ones who kept going despite it.
For more strategies from our faculty, visit our NEET Exam Strategy Guide.
Last Revision: What to Focus On
Biology — 360 Marks · Your Priority
- Cell division — Mitosis & Meiosis diagrams with all phases
- Human Heart: structure, cardiac cycle, blood pressure regulation
- Nephron structure, urine formation, osmoregulation
- Brain — cerebrum, cerebellum, medulla functions
- Mendelian Genetics, codominance, incomplete dominance
- DNA replication, transcription, translation (Central Dogma)
- Plant hormones — auxin, gibberellin, cytokinin, ABA, ethylene
- Ecosystem — food chains, pyramids of number/biomass/energy
- Biotechnology — rDNA, PCR, ELISA, GMOs
- Photosynthesis — light reactions, dark reactions, Z-scheme
- Respiration — glycolysis, Krebs cycle, ETC and ATP yield
- Reproductive health, contraception, assisted reproduction
Chemistry — 180 Marks
- Named reactions — Aldol, Cannizzaro, Reimer-Tiemann, Kolbe, Williamson
- Biomolecules — amino acids, proteins, nucleic acids, reducing sugars
- Polymers — classification, preparation, uses (Nylon, Bakelite, PVC)
- Coordination compounds — IUPAC naming, isomerism, VBT, CFT basics
- p-block elements — Group 15, 16, 17 hydrides and oxides
- Electrochemistry — Nernst equation, cell EMF, conductance
- Chemical kinetics — rate laws, Arrhenius equation, activation energy
Physics — 180 Marks
- Laws of Motion — Newton's 3 laws, friction, circular motion
- Optics — lens & mirror formula, magnification, total internal reflection
- Modern Physics — photoelectric effect, Bohr model, nuclear reactions
- Semiconductors — p-n junction, diodes, logic gates (AND/OR/NOT)
- Current Electricity — Ohm's law, Kirchhoff's laws, Wheatstone bridge
- Wave Optics — YDSE fringe width formula, diffraction, polarisation
- Magnetic Effects — Biot-Savart law, Ampere's law, magnetic moment
For detailed topic-wise notes and previous year question analysis, visit our free NEET study material section.
🛌 Sleep & WellbeingYour Body Is Part of Your Preparation
Why Sleep Matters More Than One More Hour of Study
Sleep is when your brain transfers short-term memory into long-term recall. Skipping sleep doesn't add information — it blocks your ability to access what's already there. Sleep deprivation measurably impairs memory retrieval, reaction time, and focus.
- Target 7–8 hours each night: 30 April, 1 May, and crucially, the night of 2 May
- Set a consistent wake-up time matching your exam morning schedule
- No screens for 45 minutes before bed — use Do Not Disturb mode
- If anxiety keeps you awake, lying still with eyes closed still rests the brain
Food Guidelines for Exam Week
- Eat light, familiar, home-cooked food — this is not the week to experiment
- Exam morning: dal-rice, poha, idli, or what you normally eat — nothing heavy or spicy
- Avoid high-sugar food before the exam — mid-exam energy crashes are real
- Stay well-hydrated throughout the day — dehydration reduces focus significantly
- No energy drinks or caffeine if you're not already habituated to them
Every NCERT page you studied, every mock paper you sat through, every night you chose revision — it's all stored inside you. Walk into that hall on May 3rd knowing your preparation is real. Now trust it and execute. You are ready.
For post-exam counselling and MBBS admission guidance, visit srichaitanyanorth.com/counselling.