‘This is not a school exam’: NEET UG 2026 cancellation sets off nationwide outrage among aspirants
The cancellation of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test Undergraduate (NEET UG) 2026 has reopened a familiar cycle in India’s medical entrance system: allegations of leaks, investigations across states, protests, and now, another examination date for nearly 24 lakh candidates.
The National Testing Agency (NTA) on Tuesday, May 12, announced that the NEET UG 2026 examination conducted on May 3 “cannot be permitted to stand” after inputs from central agencies and law-enforcement authorities pointed to possible compromise of the paper. The examination will now be conducted afresh on dates to be announced later.
But even before the revised schedule arrives, the reaction among aspirants has already split into anger, exhaustion, relief, and uncertainty.
For many students, the cancellation did not come as a surprise. What shocked them more was the sense that the system had returned to the same crisis within two years.
“2024 was a disaster, and now 2026 is a repeat. This isn't just a leak, it's a systemic failure. For how many years will students pay the price for NTA's incompetence? Re-conducting the exam is a bandage, not a cure. We need accountability, not just a new date,” a user shared on X.
The frustration is not only about another examination date. For many candidates, NEET preparation has already stretched across multiple years, repeat attempts, coaching cycles, and financial pressure.
Another aspirant shared, “It is not fair to someone who was working for this from last 3 years. Is this errorless? Is this our school exam that you are going to re-conduct the examination for 26 lakh aspirants?”
That line has appeared repeatedly across student discussions online since the announcement. The anger is not only directed at the alleged leak itself, but at the scale of disruption caused by re-conducting one of the country’s largest entrance examinations.
The cancellation has also triggered confusion among candidates appearing from overseas centres.
“Will it be conducted again in the Gulf centres as well? We have paid around Rs 9.5k, and most of us are writing other examination in Gulf countries as well. What about the NRI kids in Gulf?” an aspirant asked.
The NTA has stated that all candidature details and examination-centre preferences submitted for the May 2026 cycle will remain valid. Candidates will not need to register again, and no additional examination fee will be charged. The agency also said examination fees already paid will be refunded.
Still, logistical questions remain unresolved for candidates outside India, especially those balancing multiple entrance calendars.
The decision to cancel the examination followed inquiries in Rajasthan and Uttarakhand after allegations surfaced regarding circulation of question sets before the exam.
According to NTA, investigators associated with the Rajasthan Police Special Operations Group examined a question bank containing more than 400 questions circulated days before the examination. More than 100 biology and chemistry questions allegedly showed substantial similarity with the final NEET UG 2026 paper.
Searches and field inquiries were conducted in Rajasthan, including Sikar, and in Dehradun. Certain coaching operators and intermediaries also came under scrutiny.
Parallel material linked to a coaching academy in Latur, Maharashtra, also surfaced online, though local authorities reportedly said no formal investigation had begun there at the time.
The Government of India has now handed over the matter to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for a comprehensive inquiry.
Not all reactions were critical of the cancellation. Some students and educators argued that allowing the examination to stand despite leak allegations would have damaged the credibility of the admission process further.
“Good decision for saving hard working student's seats and punishing cheaters,” one student shared.
A coaching mentor said, “Fair decision for students and the future of NEET. Stay calm, avoid rumours, and keep preparing. Your hard work matters.”
That divide is now visible across coaching centres and student groups. Some believe the cancellation was unavoidable once overlap claims emerged. Others argue that honest students are again being forced to absorb the cost of institutional failures.
Soon after the cancellation announcement, National Students' Union of India (NSUI) workers held protests against the central government over the alleged paper leak and examination irregularities.
The protests may grow in the coming days, but the larger issue for the NTA is credibility.
The agency, in its statement, acknowledged that the decision would impose “substantial inconvenience” on students and families. But it added that preserving public trust in the examination system “admits of no lesser course”.
That phrase may now define the next phase of the controversy.
For many aspirants, the issue is no longer limited to one cancelled paper. It is about whether India’s high-stakes entrance examinations can still convince students that the process is secure, predictable, and fair.
Check West Bengal Class 12 results online here.
Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
But even before the revised schedule arrives, the reaction among aspirants has already split into anger, exhaustion, relief, and uncertainty.
‘2024 was a disaster, and now 2026 is a repeat’
“2024 was a disaster, and now 2026 is a repeat. This isn't just a leak, it's a systemic failure. For how many years will students pay the price for NTA's incompetence? Re-conducting the exam is a bandage, not a cure. We need accountability, not just a new date,” a user shared on X.
The frustration is not only about another examination date. For many candidates, NEET preparation has already stretched across multiple years, repeat attempts, coaching cycles, and financial pressure.
Another aspirant shared, “It is not fair to someone who was working for this from last 3 years. Is this errorless? Is this our school exam that you are going to re-conduct the examination for 26 lakh aspirants?”
Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA) tweets, "FAIMA demand immediate accountability for this paper leak. We will not stay silent. Exemplary punishment is the only way forward."
That line has appeared repeatedly across student discussions online since the announcement. The anger is not only directed at the alleged leak itself, but at the scale of disruption caused by re-conducting one of the country’s largest entrance examinations.
Questions from Gulf centres and NRI candidates
The cancellation has also triggered confusion among candidates appearing from overseas centres.
“Will it be conducted again in the Gulf centres as well? We have paid around Rs 9.5k, and most of us are writing other examination in Gulf countries as well. What about the NRI kids in Gulf?” an aspirant asked.
The NTA has stated that all candidature details and examination-centre preferences submitted for the May 2026 cycle will remain valid. Candidates will not need to register again, and no additional examination fee will be charged. The agency also said examination fees already paid will be refunded.
Still, logistical questions remain unresolved for candidates outside India, especially those balancing multiple entrance calendars.
Leak allegations spread across states
The decision to cancel the examination followed inquiries in Rajasthan and Uttarakhand after allegations surfaced regarding circulation of question sets before the exam.
According to NTA, investigators associated with the Rajasthan Police Special Operations Group examined a question bank containing more than 400 questions circulated days before the examination. More than 100 biology and chemistry questions allegedly showed substantial similarity with the final NEET UG 2026 paper.
Searches and field inquiries were conducted in Rajasthan, including Sikar, and in Dehradun. Certain coaching operators and intermediaries also came under scrutiny.
Parallel material linked to a coaching academy in Latur, Maharashtra, also surfaced online, though local authorities reportedly said no formal investigation had begun there at the time.
The Government of India has now handed over the matter to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for a comprehensive inquiry.
Relief for some students, coaching centres
Not all reactions were critical of the cancellation. Some students and educators argued that allowing the examination to stand despite leak allegations would have damaged the credibility of the admission process further.
“Good decision for saving hard working student's seats and punishing cheaters,” one student shared.
A coaching mentor said, “Fair decision for students and the future of NEET. Stay calm, avoid rumours, and keep preparing. Your hard work matters.”
That divide is now visible across coaching centres and student groups. Some believe the cancellation was unavoidable once overlap claims emerged. Others argue that honest students are again being forced to absorb the cost of institutional failures.
Protests begin, trust questions return
Soon after the cancellation announcement, National Students' Union of India (NSUI) workers held protests against the central government over the alleged paper leak and examination irregularities.
The protests may grow in the coming days, but the larger issue for the NTA is credibility.
The agency, in its statement, acknowledged that the decision would impose “substantial inconvenience” on students and families. But it added that preserving public trust in the examination system “admits of no lesser course”.
That phrase may now define the next phase of the controversy.
For many aspirants, the issue is no longer limited to one cancelled paper. It is about whether India’s high-stakes entrance examinations can still convince students that the process is secure, predictable, and fair.
Check West Bengal Class 12 results online here.
Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
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