The NEET UG exam is more than just a test in classrooms and coaching facilities all over India, including the medical prep schools in Delhi and Patna, the Rajasthan coaching hub towns of Kota and Sikar, and the small study spaces in small cities where students spend years preparing for a single chance at MBBS admission. It’s the exam. The only path to the approximately 100,000 MBBS seats available across government and private medical colleges in India is through the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test for undergraduate medical admissions.
Nearly two million kids take it each year, signifying years of preparation and, for many families, a substantial financial outlay for coaching, supplies, and application costs. The declaration that NEET UG 2026, scheduled for May 3, had been canceled on May 12 due to verified proof of a question paper leak returned those two million applicants and their families to the suspended waiting status that the majority of them had been attempting to escape.

Cancellation was the only plausible response because the details of the leak, when they surfaced from Rajasthan Police investigations raised to the CBI on May 8, were so devastating. It was discovered that about 140 questions on a “guess paper” that was being circulated prior to the test matched the genuine NEET UG 2026 question paper. This kind of overlap is not the result of chance or good fortune. After evaluating the circumstances and issuing its formal cancellation notice on May 12, the NTA acknowledged “findings concerning irregularities in the examination process.”
According to the most recent sources, thirteen persons had been arrested in relation to the document leak. The thorough probe is being carried out by the CBI. The entire extent of the network that acquired, sold, or circulated the document, as well as the geographic reach of that network, are still being determined.
The new date for the re-examination is June 21, 2026. Candidates who showed up on May 3 do not need to re-register; their current application information is still valid, and they won’t be assessed an extra price, according to NTA. Prior to the retest, updated city notification slips and new admission cards will be distributed via the official NEET portal.
Candidates must provide bank account information within the window that NTA has extended in order for the original exam payments to be reimbursed. NTA has urged students preparing for the June 21 date to continue studying using the original exam format and syllabus, which are unaltered from the canceled sitting.
This is not the first time a paper leak incident has interfered with NEET. Similar accusations surfaced from Bihar during the 2024 investigation, sparking a wave of demonstrations, legal cases, and CBI intervention. Every time the cycle repeats, the structural issue that underlies these incidents—a single high-stakes national exam where the commercial value of advance access to the paper is enormous and the consequences of detection are severe but seemingly insufficient deterrent—has been thoroughly discussed in Indian education policy circles.
The 2026 probe may result in convictions and charges that are substantial enough to alter the equation for leaks in the future. Given the trend, it’s also possible that structural intervention outside of law enforcement is needed to address the examination integrity issue. This may include distributed question sets, improved security infrastructure, revised testing procedures, or a whole alternative examination architecture.
Observing this from the outside, the impact on the students who prepared truthfully and showed up on May 3 is what the institutional statements about justice and openness fail to adequately reflect. They got ready. They took the test. After that, they waited, and instead of receiving findings, they received a notice of cancellation and a new date that was six weeks away. For students in their final year of preparation, operating on a timeline that has already stretched years, that extension is not a small thing. The retest is scheduled for June 21. The inquiry is still ongoing. The pupils continue to study.
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