The INI CET May 2026 exam was conducted by the All India Institute of Medical Sciences on May 16, 2026, in Computer-Based Test (CBT) mode across multiple exam centres in India. Candidates appearing for the exam shared mixed reactions regarding the paper pattern, difficulty level, and subject-wise weightage.
Based on initial student feedback and expert reviews, the overall paper was considered moderate to difficult, with a strong focus on clinical and conceptual questions.
According to candidates who appeared for the exam, the question paper was moderately difficult with lengthy clinical scenarios and conceptual MCQs. Many aspirants reported that the paper tested analytical thinking rather than direct factual recall.
|
Section |
Difficulty Level |
|
Pre-Clinical Subjects |
Moderate |
|
Para-Clinical Subjects |
Moderate to Difficult |
|
Clinical Subjects |
Difficult |
|
Overall Paper |
Moderate to Difficult |
Students stated that Medicine, Surgery, Microbiology, Anatomy, and Dermatology had comparatively higher weightage in the exam.
Based on memory-based questions and student reactions, the following subjects had more representation:
Medicine
Surgery
Microbiology
Anatomy
Physiology
Dermatology
Biochemistry
Obstetrics & Gynaecology
Most questions were clinical case-based and required conceptual clarity. Image-based questions were also included in multiple sections.
Yes, candidates observed several repeated and PYQ-based questions in the paper.
Approximately 10–20% questions were reportedly repeated
Multiple questions were inspired by previous AIIMS and INI CET patterns
PYQ practice proved beneficial for many aspirants
Students on online discussion forums also highlighted the importance of solving previous year MCQs and grand tests regularly.
The estimated number of good attempts may vary depending on paper difficulty and accuracy. Based on student reactions, the following range is considered safe:
|
Category |
Expected Good Attempts |
|
General/EWS |
145–160 |
|
OBC |
135–150 |
|
SC/ST |
120–135 |
Experts suggest that maintaining accuracy is more important than attempting all questions because of negative marking.
The official cutoff will be released along with counselling and result announcements. However, based on the exam difficulty level, the expected qualifying percentile may remain similar to previous sessions.
|
Category |
Expected Qualifying Percentile |
|
General |
50th Percentile |
|
OBC |
45th Percentile |
|
SC/ST |
45th Percentile |
Here are some common reactions shared by candidates:
“Questions were more conceptual and clinically oriented.”
“Microbiology and Medicine had significant weightage.”
“The paper was tougher than NEET PG for many sections.”
“PYQs and AIIMS-tagged MCQs were extremely useful.”
Several students also discussed how regular mock tests helped improve performance and guessing accuracy in lengthy CBT papers.
Candidates preparing for upcoming INI CET sessions should focus on:
Solving previous year AIIMS and INI CET questions
Practicing image-based and clinical MCQs
Giving regular grand tests
Strengthening weak subjects through revision
Improving time management and accuracy
Consistent MCQ practice and revision remain the key to scoring well in INI CET.
