With no retest date announced for the recently cancelled National Eligibility cum Entrance Test-Undergraduate (NEET-UG) exam, students, parents and educators have expressed anger, frustration and anxiety over additional study load and pressure, and the possibility of delayed admissions resulting in less time for course work. While they welcomed the exemption of fee for the retest, many called the cancellation a major failure of the examination system..
Over 20 lakh students have to take the retest for more than 10 medical courses, competing for over 2.5 lakh seats.
Describing the entire episode as unfair and stressful, groups of concerned people are demanding transport support for students when they retake the exam.
The Tamil Nadu Consumers Federation said that free bus/train travel should be provided to NEET aspirants. Students travel beyond their own States, or districts within their respective States, to take the exam, bearing significant expenses to appear for the test, the federation’s general secretary K. Thirunavukkarasu said. “This time, they will have to be compensated for their travel expenses,” he said.
P.D. Satya Sree, who completed her Class 12 this year and had been preparing for NEET, said the cancellation had left her shocked and emotionally drained. “Not just me, many of my friends who appeared for NEET this time are struggling to process this. We don’t know how to start preparing all over again,” she said, adding that the uncertainty and pressure has taken a heavy emotional toll on students for various reasons.
Another student Albin Benoy, from Odisha, said the cancellation has come as a blow. “With the examination now set to be conducted again, I do not know how I can return to Kerala and resume coaching at such short notice,” he said.
Students were also anxious about the nature of the repeat examination. “There is concern about the difficulty level of the retest. In a highly competitive exam like NEET, even a single mark can determine the college a student gets, and shape their entire future,” he said.
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For Mounika U., a long-term aspirant, the cancellation has been emotionally devastating. “Months and years of my preparation have gone to waste because of a system failure. I did nothing wrong,” she said. Although she is willing to take the examination again, she questioned who could guarantee a fair and transparent process.
Describing the cancellation of the NEET-UG exam as an injustice, particularly to those who were expecting top ranks based on the provisional answer key released shortly after the test, George Thomas, director of Brilliant Study Centre at Pala in Kerala said that the uncertainty has also created severe financial anxiety for families who had already stretched their resources for coaching, tuition and hostel expenses.
A NEET (UG) trainer from Secunderabad, G. Vijay Kumar, said the alleged paper leak and subsequent cancellation would have serious consequences, particularly for long-term aspirants. “It is difficult to counsel such young students when a prestigious national entrance examination itself becomes a failure. There is immense pressure and an emotional impact on students,” he said. Aspirants should be counselled and given adequate time to recover before reappearing for the examination, Mr. Kumar added.
Karnataka’s Higher Education Minister M.C. Sudhakar said that the NEET fiasco is testimony to the Central government’s inability to conduct such exams, and it’s time States were allowed to manage admissions to medical courses.
Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, taking to X, demanded “restoration of States’ authority to conduct such entrance exams”, and said his State had raised concerns over the centralised examination system in 2024.
The All India Students’ Federation Andhra Pradesh vice-president M. Saikumar has demanded permanent abolition of the nationwide NEET examination. He also called for immediate closure of the “incompetent” National Testing Agency, holding it responsible for repeated failures.
Protests were held near the Telangana Secretariat by the Student Islamic Organisation of India along with several aspirants. “Repeated failures send a message that the government is incapable of conducting the examination in a fair and transparent manner,” they said.
The Students’ Federation of India (Telangana), which led demonstrations in Hyderabad, termed the controversy an “administrative failure” of the government. Its leader, T. Nagaraju, said the present scandal was a repeat of past incidents because strict action had not been taken after the 2024 paper leak.
“While the officials, middlemen, and coaching mafia responsible for the leak must be arrested immediately, the demand by individual States to conduct their own entrance examinations is important. Policies that are helping education become a corporate business must also be withdrawn,” the student leaders said.
Published - May 13, 2026 07:40 pm IST