NEET 2026 result: expected date, how to download, and next steps
- The NEET 2026 exam held on 3 May 2026 was cancelled by NTA; a re-test, Re-NEET 2026, is scheduled for 21 June 2026. There is no re-registration and no extra fee, and fresh admit cards are being issued.
- Because the result follows the re-exam, expect the NEET 2026 scorecard in July 2026 at neet.nta.nic.in.
- You need your application number and date of birth to download the scorecard.
- The scorecard shows your total marks, All India Rank (AIR), percentile, and category rank.
- Once you have your rank, use the Rank Predictor and College Predictor to plan your counselling strategy.
When will NEET 2026 results come out?
The original NEET 2026 exam, held on 3 May 2026, was cancelled by the National Testing Agency after findings in a paper-leak case. NTA has scheduled a re-test, Re-NEET 2026, for 21 June 2026, with the paper running from 2:00 PM to 5:15 PM. Candidates who registered for the May exam do not need to apply again or pay any further fee; fresh admit cards are being issued, and the exam-city intimation slip is already available on the NTA portal.
Because the result now follows the 21 June re-exam rather than the original May date, expect the NEET 2026 scorecard in July 2026. NTA usually publishes results a few weeks after the test and has not committed to a fixed gap; for reference, the 2024 result came about four weeks after that year’s exam and the 2023 result about six weeks after. Watch neet.nta.nic.in for the official date.
NTA usually releases the provisional answer key about a week before the result. Once the answer key for the 21 June re-exam appears, the result is generally one to two weeks away.
How to download your NEET 2026 scorecard
The scorecard is available through NTA’s website. Here is the step-by-step process:
- Go to neet.nta.nic.in on result day.
- Click the “NEET(UG) 2026 Result” link on the homepage.
- Enter your application number and date of birth.
- Enter the security captcha and click “Submit.”
- Your scorecard will appear on screen. Download and save the PDF.
The NTA website can crash on result day due to traffic. If the page does not load, wait 15-20 minutes and try again. Keep your application number handy; you cannot access the scorecard without it.
What your scorecard shows
The NEET scorecard contains several numbers, and understanding each one matters for counselling. Here is what you will see:
- Total marks: Your raw score out of 720 (or the effective maximum if the paper had fewer scorable questions, as happened in 2025 when the topper scored 686/720).
- All India Rank (AIR): Your position among all candidates who took the exam. This is the number that counselling authorities use for seat allotment.
- Percentile: The percentage of candidates who scored equal to or below you. A percentile of 99.5 means you scored higher than 99.5% of all candidates.
- Category rank: Your rank within your specific category (SC, ST, OBC, EWS, etc.). State counselling bodies use this for reserved-category allotments.
Marks, AIR, and percentile: what is the difference?
Marks are your raw score. Percentile is a relative measure of where you stand within the entire candidate pool. AIR is the actual rank number used for counselling. Two candidates with identical marks will receive the same AIR (NTA applies tie-breaking rules based on subject-wise marks and age). The percentile and AIR are derived from marks, but the relationship between them shifts each year depending on exam difficulty and the total number of candidates.
For example, a score of 600 marks gave an AIR of about 19,000 in 2021, but the same 600 marks translated to AIR 1,386 in 2025 because the paper was harder and fewer people scored that high. This is exactly why you should not rely on last year’s marks-to-rank conversion alone. Use the Rank Predictor to see estimates based on multiple years of data.
What to do right after the result
The window between result day and counselling registration is short. Here is how to use it well:
1. Verify your marks
Cross-check your scorecard marks against the answer key you used to self-evaluate. If there is a mismatch beyond what you expected from the challenge round, you can apply for re-evaluation (though NTA grants very few of these).
2. Check your estimated rank
If the full rank list is not out yet or you want to compare against historical data, enter your marks in the Rank Predictor. It uses data from 2021-2025 to show you the range your rank could fall in.
3. Research your college options
Enter your rank, state, and category in the College Predictor to see which colleges fall in your Safe, Target, and Reach zones. This gives you a realistic picture of where you are likely to get admission based on past cutoff data from Maharashtra, Karnataka, and All India Quota counselling.
4. Understand the counselling timeline
Counselling registration typically opens 1-2 weeks after results. The full cycle runs roughly like this:
- Results: Expected July 2026, after the 21 June re-exam
- MCC (AIQ) registration: Usually opens within 2 weeks of the result
- State counselling registration: CET Cell (Maharashtra) and KEA (Karnataka) open around the same time or slightly later
- Choice filling: 3-5 days after registration closes
- Round 1 allotment: Typically 1-2 weeks after choice filling
- Subsequent rounds: Round 2, Round 3, and mop-up rounds follow at 1-2 week intervals
The entire process from result to final allotment usually takes 2-3 months. Read the full counselling process guide for a detailed breakdown of each step.
Do not wait for counselling dates to start planning. Use the weeks between the result and registration to shortlist colleges, gather documents, and understand how choice filling works. Students who prepare early make better decisions under time pressure.
Documents to keep ready
While waiting for counselling to open, start collecting these:
- NEET 2026 scorecard (downloaded from NTA)
- NEET 2026 admit card
- Class 10 and 12 marksheets and passing certificates
- Photo ID (Aadhaar card, passport, or voter ID)
- Domicile / residency certificate (for state quota seats)
- Category certificate (SC/ST/OBC/EWS, if applicable)
- Passport-size photographs (at least 6-8 copies)
- Transfer certificate from your school
Specific requirements vary by counselling authority. MCC (for All India Quota), CET Cell (for Maharashtra), and KEA (for Karnataka) each have their own document checklists. Check the counselling process guide for state-specific details.
Next steps
Your NEET score is the starting point; what you do with it in the weeks that follow determines your actual college admission. Use the Rank Predictor to translate your marks into an estimated rank, then run the College Predictor to see your realistic college options. When choice filling opens, the AI Choice Filler can help you build an optimized preference list. Every step matters, and the earlier you start, the better your outcome.
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