

Preparing for NEET 2026 is not about shortcuts or false promises. Success requires understanding the exam’s exact demands, effective planning, and consistent implementation. Here’s a straight, practical breakdown of how to approach your preparation and use the next seven months wisely.
You have around 200 days left for NEET 2026. Use this time carefully. Every day counts. Track your progress weekly and plan subjects and topics based on priority and difficulty.
The NEET syllabus is straightforward — it includes Physics, Chemistry, and Biology from Classes 11 and 12. The key book is the NCERT, which forms the base of most questions.
If you can revise NCERT five to six times, you can comfortably score above 330–340 marks in Biology alone. The syllabus is limited, but repetition is essential.
With limited time, focus matters more than duration. You don’t have time to experiment with different resources. Stick to a clear, structured plan.
Students who started early can afford trial and error — you can’t. Choose the shortest and most effective path to cover your syllabus.
If you have pending chapters, don’t try to cover everything in full-length lectures. Instead:
Watch one-shot lectures to get a clear overview.
Read NCERT and make quick notes.
Watch detailed lectures only for topics you don’t fully understand.
This method can save up to 30% of your time while maintaining clarity. Every chapter has easy and tough sections—skip unnecessary repetition and focus on what’s genuinely challenging.
After studying a topic, solve questions from reliable sources — modules, DPPs, or standard practice books like Panch.
When solving:
Attempt at least 50 tests before the exam. But giving tests isn’t enough — analysing them is what improves performance.
In the final revision phase, focus only on your mistake list and tough questions — about 1,000 out of 5,000 attempted — instead of redoing every test.
Revision is non-negotiable. Follow this cycle:
1 day after studying a topic
1 week later
1 month later
Before your next test
Use Google Calendar or reminders to schedule revisions. Just 20–25 minutes a day is enough if done consistently.
Don’t keep restarting your preparation from the same easy topics like The Living World or Units and Measurements.
If a topic yields only 4 marks, reading it 20 times won’t make it worth more. Cover it 3–4 times thoroughly and move on to higher-weightage topics.
Study 8–9 hours daily, covering all three subjects regularly. Prioritise Biology but never ignore Physics and Chemistry. Even short, focused sessions daily are more productive than long, inconsistent study days.
Most students listen to advice — only a few actually apply it. Implementation is what creates toppers.
Be among that 1% who not only watch and plan but execute every single day with discipline.
Becoming a NEET 2026 topper isn’t about luck or secret tricks. It’s about planning, discipline, and smart revision. If you follow these strategies consistently, you can secure a seat in a top government medical college — even AIIMS.