NEET Mock Test 2026 - free, full NTA pattern
Practice the NEET UG 2026 paper in the exact NTA pen-and-paper-style CBT mock format - 180 questions across Physics, Chemistry, Botany and Zoology, 720 marks, +4 for a correct answer and -1 for a wrong one, 3 hours 20 minutes. Free, unlimited attempts.
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Full-length, 180-question paper in the live NTA pattern - Physics, Chemistry, Botany and Zoology, timed at 3 hours 20 minutes, with per-subject scoring and a mistake breakdown at the end.
Start a free mockWhat this mock includes
The full-length NEET UG mock on neetmocks is built to mirror the live NTA paper one-to-one: same four-subject split, same question mix, same +4 / -1 marking, same 720-mark ceiling, same 3 hours 20 minute clock. If you have taken an official NTA NEET mock or a real past-year paper, the structure here will feel identical - and the question quality is calibrated against the last several cycles of NEET UG papers, including the post-2024 format where NTA dropped the old Section A / Section B optional split and made every one of the 180 questions compulsory.
| Subject | Questions | Marks | Marking |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physics | 45 (all compulsory) | 180 | +4 correct / -1 wrong |
| Chemistry | 45 (all compulsory) | 180 | +4 correct / -1 wrong |
| Botany | 45 (all compulsory) | 180 | +4 correct / -1 wrong |
| Zoology | 45 (all compulsory) | 180 | +4 correct / -1 wrong |
| Total | 180 questions, 3h 20m | 720 | 0 if unattempted |
Every question is a single-best-answer MCQ. Botany plus Zoology together form the Biology section (90 questions, 360 marks), historically the highest-yield half of the paper for any NEET candidate - high accuracy here is what builds a 600-plus base before Physics and Chemistry stretch the score upwards. The mock applies the same +4 / -1 rule on every one of the 180 questions; there is no partial credit, no soft penalty, no "guess freely" section anywhere in the paper.
Three hours twenty minutes over 180 questions works out to an average of about 67 seconds per question, but the per-question budget in practice is closer to 30 seconds on a recall-style Botany question and 2 to 3 minutes on a heavy Physics numerical or a multi-concept Organic Chemistry mechanism. The mock's timer is one running 200-minute clock with no per-subject sub-timer, exactly as NTA runs the live paper - so you have to learn to budget across Physics, Chemistry, Botany and Zoology yourself rather than letting the platform enforce it. Most candidates who clear a 99-plus percentile in past papers report finishing Biology inside 55 minutes, leaving roughly 50 minutes for Chemistry and 75 minutes for Physics; trying that pacing in a mock is the cheapest way to find out whether it actually works for you.
Two practice modes
The mock supports two distinct modes, picked at the start of the attempt. The mode you default to depends on whether you are still building the subject base or have already covered the syllabus once and are now training for the real exam.
- Instant Feedback mode: after every question, the platform tells you whether you got it right, shows the correct answer, and gives a short worked solution. The 200-minute timer keeps running so you still feel the pace, but you cannot bank an entire wrong-method habit for 180 questions before finding out. Best for the build phase - roughly Class 11 through to the first half of Class 12 - where you are still converting topic-by-topic NCERT knowledge into exam-style problem solving and a wrong answer is information you want immediately.
- Exam-like mode: no feedback during the attempt at all. You see the same one-paper interface with a 200-minute timer, a section switcher across Physics, Chemistry, Botany and Zoology, a mark-for-review toggle, and the submit button at the end. Scoring and analysis arrive only after submission. Best for the polish phase - the final few months before the 21 June 2026 exam - where the bottleneck is no longer recall but pacing, OMR discipline, accuracy under time pressure, and the willingness to skip a question you cannot crack in the available time.
A workable cadence is to use Instant Feedback for the first three or four full-length attempts on a topic block, then move to Exam-like mode for repeat attempts and for every mock in the final eight to ten weeks before NEET UG day. The two-mode setup matters because the failure modes are different: early on you fail by not knowing the method, later you fail by knowing the method and still mis-managing time, negative marking, or OMR fills.
Three difficulty tiers
On top of the standard NTA-tiered full paper, the mock library is bucketed into three difficulty tiers that you can choose between based on where you currently are in prep. Each tier preserves the 180-question, 720-mark, 3 hour 20 minute structure - what changes is the proportion of routine vs. hard questions and the surface area of the syllabus covered.
- Easy: roughly 60 percent routine and 30 percent medium, with only a small minority of hard problems. The aim of an Easy mock is not to inflate your score - it is to confirm your fundamentals are sound before you take a full-difficulty paper. If you cannot clear an Easy mock at 500-plus comfortably, taking an NTA-tier paper will only confirm gaps you already know about; spend a week or two on NCERT revision and try again.
- Medium: the closest match to a real NEET UG paper - the standard mock you should be taking once a week through Class 12. Difficulty distribution mirrors the NTA template; topic coverage is balanced so a single Medium paper exercises most of the high-frequency areas in each subject, including the post-rationalisation NCERT-aligned syllabus NTA has used since 2024.
- Hard: compressed to 40 to 50 percent hard problems, with a heavier presence of multi-concept Physics, mechanism-prediction Organic Chemistry, exception-heavy Inorganic, and longer-stem Biology questions that test reading speed as much as recall. Designed for the last three to four weeks before NEET, and for candidates already targeting a 99.5-plus percentile or AIIMS Delhi level ranks. Hard mocks are about widening the margin, not measuring it - expect lower scores than on a Medium paper, and read the wrong answers more carefully than the right ones.
Why our NEET UG mock matches the real paper
A mock's usefulness collapses if any of the four loadbearing variables - syllabus alignment, question style, marking and timing - drift from the live exam. We hold all four close. The syllabus is the NTA-published rationalised NEET syllabus, refreshed against the latest notification, so chapters NTA pruned in the 2024 rationalisation do not produce questions and the re-emphasised areas (Biomolecules, Human Physiology, Modern Physics, Organic name reactions) are represented in proportion to their real-paper weight. Question style is calibrated against the last three years of NEET UG papers: phrasing, option distractors (especially in Biology, where three wrong options often share a single misread keyword), and numerical answer ranges all sit inside the bands NTA has actually used.
Marking is the one variable that third-party mocks often fudge. Several platforms still award partial marks, treat multi-mark answers softly, or count an unattempted question against you. We do not - the mock applies +4 / -1 on every one of the 180 questions, 0 on unattempted, multiple-options-marked treated as wrong (-1), and no partial credit anywhere. That matches the live NTA OMR rule and is the only marking scheme worth training against for 21 June 2026. The implication for strategy is concrete: a blind guess on a four-option NEET question averages -0.25 marks, so the mock will quietly punish a guess-everything habit you may have built on softer mocks elsewhere.
Timing matches the live paper too: one continuous 200-minute server-side timer, no soft-pause, no per-subject sub-timer, and a section switcher that lets you move freely between Physics, Chemistry, Botany and Zoology in any order. Behaviour on tab-switch and on a brief network drop mirrors what the NTA-style platform does in practice - the timer keeps running on the server, your attempts are saved, and you can resume on the same attempt without losing the time you have already used.
After you finish: score and analysis
The result page is the part of a mock that decides whether the next attempt actually improves on this one. Ours is built so a single look tells you what to fix next, not just what the score was.
- Per-subject score: your raw mark out of 180 in Physics, Chemistry, Botany and Zoology separately, alongside the total out of 720 and the count of correct, wrong and unattempted in each subject. The subject-wise split is what matters for diagnosis - a 540 with a balanced 130/130/140/140 split is a very different gap analysis from a 540 built on 100/100/170/170.
- Indicative percentile band: a rough percentile range and an indicative All India Rank band based on how the same paper has been scored across our user base. This is an indicator, not the official NTA percentile - real NEET normalisation runs across the entire candidate cohort on exam day, which a mock cannot reproduce. Treat it as a directional check on whether you are inside the band for a government MBBS seat or for a specific tier of college; confirm exact category cutoffs on the cutoffs & ranks page.
- Mistake clustering: the wrong-answer review groups your incorrect attempts by topic and sub-topic, so you can see at a glance whether a low Biology score came from Human Physiology, Plant Kingdom, Genetics, or a diffuse spread. Two or three wrong answers in one sub-topic is usually a revision target; one wrong each across ten different sub-topics is usually a pacing or carelessness target.
- Time heat-map: a per-question time chart that shows where your minutes went. The most common failure pattern in a low NEET score is not too many wrong attempts - it is three or four Physics questions that swallowed 8-plus minutes each and left no time for the last fifteen questions of the paper. The heat-map makes that visible at a glance.
Where to go next
A mock score is most useful in context. The pages below cover the rest of the NEET UG 2026 picture - what the paper officially tests, who is eligible, what ranks open which colleges, and how the application window runs. Pair a weekly mock with one of these reads and the prep cycle is roughly self-managing.
- NEET UG pattern & marking - the full section-by-section breakdown of the 180-question paper plus the +4 / -1 maths behind the skip-vs-guess decision.
- NEET cutoffs & ranks - the NTA qualifying percentile bands by category and indicative MCC AIQ closing ranks for AIIMS Delhi, JIPMER, and the top government medical colleges.
- NEET eligibility - Class 12 PCB requirements, the 50 percent / 45 percent / 40 percent aggregate thresholds, the minimum-age-17 rule, and the dropper / repeater rules (no attempt limit, no upper age cap).
- NEET application - the 2026 application window, the photo and signature specifications, the fee structure, and the common mistakes that cost a candidate their preferred test city.
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No paywall, no card details - a single mobile verification and you are inside the full 180-question paper, with scoring and analysis at the end.
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