Magnetism and Matter is often considered tricky by students because it combines theory with application-based questions. It frequently overlaps with other topics like moving charges and current electricity, which makes it more important during revision. Although the chapter is relatively short and does not involve heavy formulas, students often struggle with recall and application during exams.
To address this, Physics Wallah offers structured PYQ practice for Magnetism and Matter along with solutions. The focus is on helping students understand how questions are formed and how core concepts are applied in NEET.
Practising previous-year questions helps students identify important NEET patterns and frequently asked concepts from this chapter. The PDF below includes exam-level MCQs with solutions for better revision.
Practising Magnetism and Matter NEET PYQs with Physics Wallah helps students understand important NEET concepts through real previous-year MCQs with answers. The PDF includes exam-level questions which are commonly asked in NEET.
Practice real NEET question trends: Solving previous years’ NEET questions helps students understand important topics like magnetic dipole moment, bar magnets, magnetic field lines, and Earth’s magnetism according to actual exam patterns.
Better understanding of formula-based questions: NEET questions from Magnetism and Matter often require direct application of formulas and concepts. Regular practice improves calculation speed, accuracy, and confidence in solving magnetic field and torque-related numericals.
Revise key concepts quickly: Topics like diamagnetic, paramagnetic, and ferromagnetic materials become easier to recall through practice.
Strengthen Earth magnetism concepts: Questions from Earth’s magnetic field and measurement techniques are commonly repeated.
Build exam confidence: Many NEET questions contain closely related options and conceptual traps. Practising chapter-wise PYQs helps students improve option elimination techniques, reduce silly mistakes, and perform better under exam pressure.
