Trained one step ahead of NEET — so the exam can never surprise you.
ReNEET 2026 changed the game overnight and caught lakhs of students off guard. The Predicted Batch trains you above NEET level on the most-likely topics — so a surprise paper feels easy.
The exam changed overnight. Our question bank already had it.
When ReNEET 2026 dropped a tougher, reasoning-heavy paper, we traced every single question back to our bank — and showed students exactly which ones they'd already practised.
That's the whole idea: if it can appear in NEET, you've already seen it here.
You don't jump to the exam. We climb you up to it — from wherever you are.
Two simple promises make sure NEET can't catch you off guard:
1. We start at YOUR level
Maybe today you can only solve the simple ones. Perfect — we start there and take you up one step at a time: easy → exam-level → one step beyond NEET. Never thrown in the deep end.
2. Every revision is a NEW question
When a topic comes back, it's a fresh question — never the same one. So you don't memorise one answer, you master the concept and recognise it any way NEET asks.
Here's what that climb actually looks like 👇
Watch one real Physics topic climb the exact way ReNEET tested it
Topic: Intrinsic Semiconductors. The same idea, asked harder and harder — ending in an image question above NEET level. Real questions from our bank.
In a pure semiconductor (above 0 K), the free electrons (nₑ) and holes (n_h) satisfy:
Apply a voltage across intrinsic semiconductor — the current is carried by:
Two identical pure-silicon bars: P at 300 K, Q at 400 K. Which is correct?
From the carriers-vs-temperature graph: at absolute zero (T = 0 K), pure silicon behaves as a —
Your real fear: NEET asks it a way you've never seen
You studied the topic. But in the exam, one twist you never practised makes you freeze. So we bring the same concept back as a brand-new question every time you revise — until no version of it can catch you off guard.
Why are glucose and ribose called monosaccharides while cellulose is called a polysaccharide?
A sugar has the molecular formula C₅H₁₀O₅ and cannot be broken down into simpler sugar units. Which conclusion about this sugar is correct?
Which statements about sugars (NCERT) are correct? S1: A monosaccharide cannot be hydrolysed into a simpler sugar. S2: Glucose is C₆H₁₂O₆. S3: A polysaccharide is a long chain of monosaccharides. S4: Ribose is C₆H₁₂O₆.
Same concept, three different questions → you don't memorise one answer, you own the concept. That's why a surprise paper can't shake you.
We train the question types that actually win NEET now
NEET isn't simple recall anymore. Each year a different style dominates — and we train all of them.
📋 Long-form & multi-fact MCQs
Long, multi-fact MCQs dominated NEET 2025 and the cancelled NEET 2026 Phase 1 — 52% multi-fact, statement-based up 4.8×. We drill exactly these, not one-line recall.
🧠 Reasoning & application MCQs
ReNEET 2026 Physics was mostly "apply the concept," not formula-plugging. Our reasoning-style questions train this directly.
🖼️ Image, graph & NCERT-precision
Chemistry rewards NCERT-line precision plus graph/figure reading. We train concept-application, not rote.
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Try real NEET questions now — sign in only when you want to save your progress.
📄 ReNEET 2026 Question Paper — all 180 Qs with solutions
The full June 21 re-exam paper, chapter-mapped with answers & free PDF download.
📖 All PYQs
Every NEET previous-year question — Bio, Physics, Chemistry, chapter-wise with answers.
📝 NCERT-marked PYQs
See exactly which NCERT lines NEET turned into questions.
⚙️ PYQ Test Generator
Build your own real-exam test in seconds — opens straight in the app, 2 free.
Don't get surprised. Get ahead.
The Predicted Batch trains you one step above NEET — on every topic, till exam day.
Free to start • NEET 2027 & 2028
