India’s biggest medical entrance exam could soon see major reforms.
According to reports, the government is discussing several changes to the NEET-UG examination system after the massive controversy surrounding NEET 2026.
Some of the biggest proposals reportedly being considered include:
Introducing a maximum age limit for candidates
Limiting the number of NEET attempts
Gradually shifting the exam to online mode
At present, students only need to be at least 17 years old to appear for NEET.
There is no upper age limit and no restriction on attempts.
Why NEET Reforms Are Being Discussed
The discussions began after the huge uproar over NEET-UG 2026.
The exam was cancelled earlier following allegations that a “guess paper” matched several actual questions in the exam.
The issue triggered protests across the country and created panic among lakhs of students and parents.
Although the National Testing Agency (NTA) reportedly informed the parliamentary panel that the paper was not leaked through its system, the controversy has pushed authorities to rethink the future structure of NEET.
Meetings were reportedly held between officials of the Parliamentary Standing Committee and the NTA regarding possible reforms.
What Changes Could Happen?
If the proposals are approved, future NEET exams may include several major changes.
Possible reforms under discussion are:
Fixed upper age limit
Limited number of attempts
Computer-based online exams
Multi-stage examination format
Stronger biometric verification
AI-powered monitoring systems
Reports suggest these ideas are based on recommendations made by the Radhakrishnan Committee, which was formed after the controversy.
Why Some Experts Support Attempt Limits
Some education experts believe unlimited NEET attempts increase unhealthy competition and mental pressure.
According to them:
Students spend many years preparing only for NEET
Coaching dependency becomes stronger
Stress levels rise significantly
Fresh school students face tougher competition from repeaters
A medical university vice-chancellor reportedly said that medical education requires long-term stamina and consistent learning ability, which is why attempt restrictions may help.
Students and Parents Have Concerns Too
The possible changes have also created anxiety among students and families.
Many believe attempt limits could negatively affect:
Rural students
Economically weaker candidates
Students without expensive coaching access
Late bloomers who improve with time
NEET is already considered one of India’s toughest entrance exams, with over 22 lakh students competing for a limited number of MBBS seats this year.
Students fear that adding restrictions could make the pressure even worse.
NEET Could Slowly Move Online
Another major proposal is shifting NEET from offline mode to computer-based testing.
Currently, the exam is conducted using pen and paper because of the huge number of candidates appearing nationwide.
However, NTA reportedly informed the committee that its current online infrastructure can handle around 1.5 lakh students per shift and could expand further within a year.
The government believes online exams may improve:
Security
Monitoring
Logistics management
Prevention of paper leaks
Still, experts say India will need large-scale infrastructure upgrades before NEET can fully move online across the country.
No Final Decision Yet
So far, no official announcement has been made regarding age limits, attempt caps, or online-only exams.
The proposals are still under discussion and may take time before any changes are implemented.
But one thing is clear: after one of the biggest controversies in NEET’s history, the government appears ready to bring major structural reforms to India’s medical entrance examination system.




