Re-NEET 2026 Is on June 21 — Your 9-Day Last-Week Revision Plan
The NEET UG 2026 exam held on May 3 was cancelled by the National Testing Agency (NTA) following a question paper leak. After weeks of uncertainty, NTA officially confirmed Sunday, June 21, 2026 as the Re-NEET 2026 date — approved by the Government of India.
That leaves you 9 days.
This is not the time for a full syllabus revision. It is the time for a focused, surgical plan that protects the marks you are already capable of scoring. Here is exactly what to do — day by day, subject by subject.
Before Anything Else: Your Admit Card and Exam Details
Handle logistics first so nothing blindsides you on exam day.
- Admit card release: June 14, 2026 — available at neet.nta.nic.in
- Important: Your May 3 admit card is not valid. A fresh card will be issued. Download and print as soon as it is live.
- Exam timing: 2:00 PM to 5:15 PM IST (offline, pen-and-paper)
- No fresh registration required — your original application remains valid
- No additional exam fee — NTA has confirmed fee refunds for the cancelled exam
Set a reminder for June 14 to download your admit card immediately. Check your exam city on the NTA portal if you have not done so already.
The 9-Day Revision Plan: What to Focus On
Over 80% of NEET questions are NCERT-based. With 9 days remaining, your strategy is simple: master NCERT, not coaching notes. Solve timed mocks daily. Do not start new topics.
Days 1–3 (June 12–14): Biology — Your Highest Scoring Subject
Biology carries 360 marks out of 720. These chapters give the highest return in the shortest time:
- Genetics and Evolution (Mendelian genetics, DNA replication, mutations) — high weightage every year
- Human Physiology (digestion, circulation, nervous system, excretion)
- Reproduction (human reproduction, reproductive health)
- Ecology (ecosystems, biodiversity, environmental issues)
- Cell Biology and Biomolecules
Method: Read NCERT page by page. Mark every diagram and table. Do not rely on bullet-point summaries alone — NEET setters lift questions verbatim from NCERT lines that look like throwaway sentences.
Days 4–5 (June 15–16): Chemistry — Secure the Mid-Range Marks
- Organic Chemistry: Reaction mechanisms (substitution, elimination, addition), Named reactions, Aldehydes and Ketones, Amines
- Physical Chemistry: Chemical Equilibrium, Thermodynamics (first and second law only), Electrochemistry
- Inorganic Chemistry: Coordination Compounds (IUPAC naming, isomerism), p-block elements (Groups 15–17)
Do not attempt to cover all of Inorganic. Coordination Compounds and p-block alone account for a disproportionate share of Inorganic questions.
Days 6–7 (June 17–18): Physics — Stop the Bleeding
Physics is where most students lose marks. The goal here is not to ace Physics — it is to not let it drag your total down.
- Modern Physics (photoelectric effect, nuclear physics, radioactivity) — consistently high weightage
- Electrostatics and Current Electricity — formulae-heavy but predictable
- Laws of Motion and Work-Energy Theorem — conceptual, NCERT examples sufficient
- Optics (ray optics only — wave optics is lower priority for last-minute revision)
Skip: Rotational motion, fluid mechanics, and experimental Physics if you are not already comfortable with them. The time cost to revise these is too high relative to marks at stake.
Days 8–9 (June 19–20): Full Mock Tests + Light Revision Only
- Take one full mock test each day under timed conditions (2:00 PM to 5:15 PM — match the actual exam window)
- Analyse errors: wrong answers only. What was the gap — conceptual, reading error, or calculation slip?
- Do not attempt to fix weak chapters at this stage. Reinforce what is already strong.
- Evening of June 20: Light reading of Biology NCERT only. Sleep by 10:30 PM.
Exam Day: June 21
- Carry your new admit card (June 14 release) — not the May 3 card
- Carry a valid photo ID (Aadhaar, passport, school ID)
- Reach your exam centre at least 60 minutes before 2:00 PM
- Attempt Biology first — it is your highest-scoring section and builds confidence
- Mark difficult questions and return to them. Do not spend more than 90 seconds on any single question in the first pass
- Negative marking: −1 per wrong answer. If you genuinely cannot eliminate at least two options, skip it
What If Your NEET Score Is Not Enough for India’s MBBS Seats?
This is a question worth thinking about now — not after results are declared.
India has approximately 1.08 lakh MBBS seats across government and private colleges. Over 24 lakh students typically appear for NEET. The arithmetic is straightforward: most NEET aspirants — including many who score 400+ — do not secure a government MBBS seat. Private college fees in India often range from ₹50 lakh to over ₹1 crore for the full course.
For students who clear the NEET qualifying marks but cannot secure a preferred seat in India, MBBS abroad is a legitimate and increasingly mainstream path — provided you choose the right country and the right university.
Explore MBBS Abroad for September 2026 Intake
Campus Highway works with NMC-approved universities across Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan. Seats for September 2026 are still open.
MBBS Abroad in September 2026 — Is It Still Possible?
Yes — and the window is closing faster than most students realise.
Countries like Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan have September intake deadlines that typically fall between July and August. Application and documentation processes take 3–6 weeks. Students who begin the process immediately after NEET results (expected mid-July) can comfortably meet September deadlines.
Key facts to know:
- NEET score required: Any qualifying score — these universities do not have competitive cutoffs like Indian government colleges
- Medium of instruction: English (all recommended universities)
- NMC approval: Essential — Campus Highway only recommends universities on the NMC-approved list
- Total course cost: Varies by country, typically between ₹25 lakh and ₹45 lakh for the full 6-year MBBS programme including hostel — significantly lower than Indian private colleges
- After graduation: Must clear FMGE/NExT to practise in India
The most common mistake students make is waiting until results are declared to start researching. By then, good seats in reputable universities fill up and visa timelines get tight. If MBBS abroad is even a possibility in your plan, start gathering information now.
Get a Free MBBS Abroad Consultation
Our counsellors can walk you through country options, fee structures, and September 2026 timelines — before your NEET result. No commitment required.
Frequently Asked Questions — Re-NEET 2026
What is the Re-NEET 2026 exam date?
The Re-NEET UG 2026 exam is scheduled for Sunday, June 21, 2026, from 2:00 PM to 5:15 PM IST. It will be conducted in offline (pen-and-paper) mode. No fresh registration is required — your original NEET 2026 application remains valid.
When will the Re-NEET 2026 admit card be released?
The Re-NEET 2026 admit card will be released on June 14, 2026 on the official NTA portal at neet.nta.nic.in. The admit card issued for the May 3 exam is not valid for the re-examination. Download and print the new card as soon as it is available.
What should I study in the last 9 days before NEET 2026?
Prioritise high-weightage NCERT chapters: Biology (Genetics & Evolution, Human Physiology, Ecology), Chemistry (Organic Reaction Mechanisms, Equilibrium, Coordination Compounds), and Physics (Modern Physics, Electrostatics, Mechanics). Solve 1–2 timed full mock tests daily. Do not start new topics at this stage — reinforce what you already know.
Can I get MBBS admission abroad if my NEET 2026 score is low?
Yes. MBBS programmes in Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan require a valid qualifying NEET score but do not have competitive cutoffs. The September 2026 intake is still open. Campus Highway assists with NMC-approved university selection, admissions, and visa processing for Indian students.
Is MBBS abroad valid for practising medicine in India?
Yes, provided you graduate from an NMC-approved university and clear the FMGE/NExT exam after returning to India. Campus Highway only recommends universities on the NMC-approved list to ensure your degree is recognised for Indian medical licensing.
What countries offer MBBS admission for September 2026 intake?
Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan have September 2026 MBBS intake windows currently open for Indian students. These are English-medium programmes at significantly lower costs compared to Indian private medical colleges. Contact Campus Highway to check current seat availability.
Your MBBS Dream Does Not End With One Exam
Whether you clear Re-NEET 2026 comfortably or need a Plan B, Campus Highway’s counsellors can help you map the right next step. Talk to us — it costs nothing.
