NEET 2026 Last 30 Days Timetable Realistic 4-Week Plan That Actually Works

You have 30 days left. You have opened at least four different timetables this week. None of them felt doable.

One said to study 15 hours a day. Another had a colour-coded hour-by-hour schedule that broke down by Day 3. A third was written by someone who scored 720 and genuinely does not remember what it felt like to be behind.

Here is what I know from teaching students in the final month before NEET: the plan is not the problem. The execution gap is. Most students fail the last 30 days not because they studied too little  but because they studied the wrong things, in the wrong order, without a clear measure of progress.

This NEET 2026 last 30 days timetable is built around one thing: what actually moves your score in the time you have left. Not what looks impressive on paper.

The One Rule That Makes or Breaks Your Last 30 Days

Before you look at the timetable, this needs to be said clearly  because skipping this is why most students waste the first two weeks of their final month.

The last 30 days are for consolidation. Not learning.

That distinction sounds simple. It is not. Every day in this final month, something will tempt you to start something new: a chapter you “never properly covered,” a coaching module you skipped, a YouTube series on a topic that felt weak in your last mock. Most of the time, starting new material 30 days before NEET will cost you more marks than it gains.

Here is why. When you pick up a new chapter at this stage, you are competing against time, you rarely finish it properly, you do not get to practice questions on it, and the anxiety of “not finishing it” bleeds into your revision of everything else. Meanwhile, the chapters you already know 60–70% of  the ones that just need one clean revision pass and some mock practice  get less attention than they deserve.

Those 60–70% chapters are where your real marks are. A chapter you almost know is far more valuable right now than a chapter you are starting from scratch.

The only exception: if a chapter is genuinely high-weightage and you have covered absolutely zero of it, spend one focused day on it in Week 1  then move on. Do not let it consume your plan.

Everything in the timetable below is built on this principle. Revision first. Mocks to test it. Analysis to fix the gaps. Repeat. That is the entire last 30 days  done well.

Holographic breakdown of NEET 2026 high-yield genetics and evolution topics for top rank score

NEET 2026 Genetics and Evolution All Concepts Diagrams and 50 Most Tested Questions

NEET 2026 Last 30 Days Timetable  Your 4-Week Plan

Most timetables give you a day-by-day breakdown that falls apart by Day 4 because life does not work in 45-minute slots. This one gives you weekly goals and a daily structure you can adapt  without losing direction.

Each week has one primary goal. Every day inside that week feeds that goal. If you miss a day, you do not start over, you continue. One missed day does not break a week. Losing the weekly goal does.

Daily structure  use this as your framework, not a fixed clock:

  • Morning block (2–3 hours): Hardest subject or weakest chapter  when your mind is fresh
  • Afternoon block (2–3 hours): Second subject  medium difficulty
  • Evening block (1–2 hours): Revision, error log review, or light reading
  • Night (30 minutes): Read through your mistake notebook  nothing new

Recommended daily hours: 8–10 hours
Minimum daily hours (school-going or coaching students): 5–6 hours focused  this is enough if it is genuinely focused

Week 1  Revision Foundation (Days 1–7)

Goal: Complete a first-pass revision of all high-weightage chapters across all three subjects.

No full-length mocks this week. Chapter-wise practice questions only. This week is about activating what you already know  not testing under pressure.

Subject Focus Chapters Daily Hours Output by Day 7
Biology Human Physiology · Genetics · Ecology · Plant Physiology 3 hrs All 4 chapters revised once  PYQs attempted
Physics Mechanics · Electrostatics · Modern Physics 2 hrs Key formulas recalled without notes
Chemistry Inorganic (NCERT reactions) · Thermodynamics · Electrochemistry 2 hrs NCERT Inorganic read once fully

Week 1 output goal: You should be able to sit a chapter-wise Biology test by Day 7 and score above 70% on Human Physiology and Genetics. If you cannot, those chapters need an extra day before Week 2 begins.

Week 2  Mock Integration (Days 8–14)

Goal: Take your first full-length mock and use the results to sharpen Week 3.

This is the week most students either gain momentum or lose it. The students who gain momentum are not the ones with the highest mock score, they are the ones who spend as much time analysing the mock as they did taking it.

Day Activity Hours
Days 8–12 Continue subject-wise revision (weak areas from Week 1) 7–9 hrs/day
Day 13 Full-length mock  timed, no interruptions 3.5 hrs exam + 2 hrs analysis
Day 14 Deep analysis of mock  categorise every wrong answer 3 hrs analysis + 3 hrs targeted revision

Week 2 output goal: After mock analysis on Day 14, you must have a clear list of your top 3 weak areas. These three areas become the priority for Week 3. If you skip the analysis, Week 3 will be directionless.

Week 3  Consolidation and Accuracy (Days 15–21)

Goal: Fix the gaps from Week 2 mock. Improve accuracy, not just speed.

Speed without accuracy in NEET costs marks twice, once for the wrong answer, once for the negative mark. This week is about getting questions right, not getting through them fast.

Day Activity Hours
Days 15–18 Targeted revision of top 3 weak areas from Week 2 analysis 7–9 hrs/day
Day 19 Full-length mock 2 3.5 hrs exam + 2 hrs analysis
Day 20 Fix errors from Mock 2  compare with Mock 1 mistakes 3 hrs
Day 21 Full-length mock 3 + 2-hour analysis 3.5 hrs exam + 2 hrs analysis

Week 3 output goal: Your accuracy on Biology should improve by at least 8–10% compared to your Week 2 mock. If the same mistakes are repeating across Mock 1, 2 and 3  those are your priority for Week 4, not new chapters.

Week 4  Full-Length Mocks and Final Revision (Days 22–28)

Goal: Stabilise your score. No new chapters. NCERT Biology line by line.

By Week 4, your score should not be swinging wildly between mocks. If it is  the issue is not knowledge, it is consistency. Focus this week on removing the careless errors and time-management issues that cause inconsistency.

Day Activity Hours
Day 22 NCERT Biology full read  not deep study, line-by-line recall 4 hrs
Day 23 Full-length mock 4 + analysis 5.5 hrs
Day 24 Revision  Chemistry Inorganic + Physics formula sheet 7 hrs
Day 25 Full-length mock 5 + analysis 5.5 hrs
Day 26 High-yield fact revision  Biology only 6 hrs
Day 27 Full-length mock 6 + quick analysis 5 hrs
Day 28 Light revision  all three subjects · No new questions · Early sleep 3 hrs max

Week 4 output goal: Score within 30 marks of your target across all three mocks this week. If your target is 550  you should be seeing 520–580. Consistent range matters more than one perfect mock.

Days 29–30  The Two Days Before NEET

These two days have one job: keep what you have built. Nothing more.

  • No full-length mocks  your brain needs to recover, not be tested
  • Read your personal mistake notebook  the one you have been building across all six mocks
  • Revise only high-yield facts: Biology diagrams, Chemistry Inorganic reactions, Physics key formulas
  • Study no more than 4 hours on Day 29, 2 hours on Day 30
  • Sleep 8 hours on both nights  this is not optional

The practical exam-week plan of what to do on the morning of NEET, what to carry, and what the waiting room should look like  is in Section 7 below.

Last Month NEET 2026 Preparation Strategy  What to Focus On (and What to Stop Touching)

The timetable above tells you when to study. This section tells you what to study, which chapters to prioritize, which to revise lightly, and which to leave completely alone.

The biggest mistake students make in the last month is treating all chapters equally. You do not have time for that. Some chapters give you 3–4 questions in NEET. Others give you one question every three years. Your revision time should reflect that difference.

Here is a combined high-weightage chapter table across all three subjects  these chapters together account for roughly 65–70% of the total NEET paper:

Subject High-Weightage Chapters Avg. Questions
Biology Human Physiology · Genetics · Ecology · Plant Physiology · Cell Biology 38–42
Physics Mechanics · Electrostatics · Modern Physics · Optics · Thermodynamics 25–28
Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry · Thermodynamics · Electrochemistry · Organic Mechanisms 24–27

Now subject by subject  what to do, what to skip, and the one thing most students get wrong in each.

Biology  The Highest ROI Revision in the Last 30 Days

Biology is 90 questions out of 180 in NEET. It is also the subject where NCERT is the only source you need, not a single extra book, not a supplementary module, not a coaching handout.

Every year, students lose Biology marks not because they do not know the chapter  but because they paraphrased something NCERT states precisely. The NTA lifts questions directly from NCERT lines, diagrams and tables. If you have not read NCERT Biology line by line at least once in the last 30 days, that is your single highest-priority action this month.

What to focus on:

  • Human Physiology  Neural control, Chemical coordination, Circulation, Excretion (4–6 questions per paper without exception)
  • Genetics and Evolution  Mendelian ratios, Molecular basis, Pedigree analysis, Evolution theories (13–19 questions per paper)
  • Ecology  Ecosystems, Biodiversity, Environmental issues (5–8 questions  mostly direct NCERT fact recall)
  • Plant Physiology  Photosynthesis, Respiration, Plant growth regulators (4–6 questions)

What to revise lightly (1 day maximum):

  • Biomolecules  structure of DNA, RNA, enzymes  skip the detailed biochemistry
  • Microbes in Human Welfare  mostly one-liners, 30 minutes of revision is enough
  • Biotechnology  Principles and Applications  important but predictable; PYQs from last 5 years cover it fully

What to skip entirely if you are short on time:

  • Detailed Plant Kingdom and Animal Kingdom taxonomy beyond class-level identification
  • Full structural chemistry of biomolecules not covered in NCERT exercises

For a deeper chapter-by-chapter breakdown of Human Physiology and Genetics  including tricks, PYQ patterns and common mistakes  both are covered in detail in the 

NEET 2026 Human Physiology guide and  NEET 2026 Genetics and Evolution guide on this site.

Physics  Which Topics to Revise and Which to Leave

Physics is where most NEET aspirants lose unnecessary marks  not because the concepts are too hard, but because they revise theory without practising enough numerical questions.

Reading the Laws of Motion chapter again will not help you in the last 30 days. Solving 8–10 numericals on Laws of Motion  timed, without formula sheets  will. The distinction matters because NEET Physics rewards application far more than recall.

What to focus on:

  • Mechanics (Laws of Motion, Work-Energy, Rotational Motion)  7–9 questions per paper, most are numerical
  • Electrostatics and Current Electricity  5–7 questions, consistent across papers
  • Modern Physics (Photoelectric effect, Nuclear Physics, Semiconductors)  5–6 questions, mix of concept and numerical
  • Optics (Ray and Wave)  3–4 questions, mostly formula-based

What to revise lightly:

  • Waves and Oscillations  important but predictable; PYQs cover the tested range well
  • Fluid Mechanics and Thermal Properties  one or two questions per paper, not worth deep revision in the last month

What to skip if you are short on time:

  • Derivations for chapters that have never appeared as derivation questions in NEET  the NTA tests application, not proof

The one thing most students get wrong in Physics: They revise formulas but not units and dimensions. At least 1–2 NEET Physics questions per paper are solved faster by dimensional analysis than by solving the full equation. Spend 30 minutes specifically on dimensional analysis in Week 2.

Chemistry  NCERT Inorganic First, Then Physical Calculations

Chemistry in NEET has three distinct sections  and they need three different revision strategies. Treating all of Chemistry the same way is one of the most common last-month mistakes.

Inorganic Chemistry  NCERT only, no exceptions:
This is the fastest available marks in all of NEET. Inorganic Chemistry questions are almost entirely direct NCERT fact recall  reactions, properties, periodic trends, coordination chemistry. Students who read NCERT Inorganic carefully score 12–15 marks from it. Students who try to “understand” Inorganic Chemistry from other sources waste time and still get it wrong.

Read NCERT Chemistry Part 1 (Class 12) fully in Week 1. That is your entire Inorganic revision strategy.

Physical Chemistry  Calculations need practice, not re-reading:
Thermodynamics, Electrochemistry, Chemical Kinetics and Solutions are calculation-heavy. Re-reading theory in the last month will not help. Solve 5–8 numericals per topic  especially Electrochemistry (cell EMF, Nernst equation) and Thermodynamics (Hess’s law, Gibbs free energy).

Organic Chemistry  mechanisms and named reactions, not edge cases:
Focus on: SN1/SN2 reactions, addition reactions, aldehydes and ketones, amines, biomolecules reactions. Skip obscure named reactions that have appeared once in 10 years. The NTA repeats the same 15–18 Organic mechanisms consistently.

Mock Tests and PYQs in the Last 30 Days  Exactly How Many and How to Use Them

There is a version of last-month preparation that looks like this: take a full-length mock every day, see a score, feel bad or feel good, and take another one the next day. Many students do this. Almost none of them improve significantly.

The mock is not the revision. The analysis after the mock is.

Taking 30 mocks in 30 days without proper analysis will not improve your score. Taking 6 well-analysed mocks  where every wrong answer is understood and re-attempted  will.

How Many Full-Length Mocks to Take  Week by Week

Week Mock Type Frequency Purpose
Week 1 (Days 1–7) Chapter-wise tests only 1 per subject per day Test revision, not full paper pressure
Week 2 (Days 8–14) 1 full-length mock Day 13 Baseline your current level
Week 3 (Days 15–21) 2 full-length mocks Days 19 and 21 Track improvement, fix patterns
Week 4 (Days 22–28) 3 full-length mocks Days 23, 25, 27 Stabilise score, fix inconsistencies
Days 28–30 No mocks Mental and physical recovery

Total: 6 full-length mocks in 30 days. Not 30. Not 15. Six  each followed by real analysis.

For PYQs: use them in Weeks 1 and 2 as chapter-wise practice material. A chapter-wise PYQ set from 2019–2024 is more useful than any test series question at this stage  because the NTA actually repeats question patterns, and PYQs show you exactly what to expect.

The 3-Step Post-Mock Analysis Routine That Changes Your Score

Most students mark their score, feel something about it, and move on. That is not analysis. This is:

Step 1  Categorise every wrong answer into one of three buckets:

  • Concept gap  you genuinely did not know the answer
  • Careless error  you knew it but marked wrong (misread, calculated wrong, skipped a word)
  • Time pressure  you guessed because you ran out of time

Each bucket needs a different fix. Concept gaps need revision. Careless errors need slower, more deliberate practice. Time pressure needs a mock-taking strategy  which questions to attempt first, which to skip.

Step 2  Spend 10 focused minutes on each concept gap:
Not on each wrong answer  on each concept. If you got 4 questions wrong because of the same misunderstanding about electrochemistry cell notation, that is one concept gap, not four. Fix the concept once, then re-attempt all four questions.

Step 3  Re-attempt the wrong questions 48 hours later without notes:
This is the step almost no one does  and it is the most important one. If you cannot answer the question 48 hours later without looking at your notes, you have not fixed the gap. You have just read the answer. There is a difference.

How to Adjust This 30-Day Plan to Your Situation

The 4-week timetable above works as a framework. But a dropper studying 10 hours a day and a Class 12 student with board exams and coaching sessions are not in the same situation. Small adjustments make the difference between a plan that works and one that gets abandoned by Day 6.

Here is how to adapt it for your specific situation.

If You Are a Dropper (Full-Time, No School)

You have the most time  which also means you have the most risk of wasting it. Droppers often fall into one of two traps: over-planning (spending two hours building a colour-coded schedule instead of studying) or over-mocking (taking a full test every day without analysis).

Your specific adjustments:

  • Follow the full 8–10 hour daily structure from Section 2
  • Add one extra chapter-wise test per day in Week 1  you have the time and you need the pressure
  • In Weeks 3 and 4, your mock target should be 550+ if your previous NEET score was 450–500. Be honest about where you are  do not skip to 600+ targets if your Week 2 mock says otherwise
  • Your biggest risk is emotional: a bad mock in Week 3 can derail two days of study. Build a 24-hour rule  after a bad mock, you analyse it, fix it, and move forward. You do not rebuild the entire plan.

If You Are a Class 12 Student Balancing School or Coaching

Your time is limited  but focused study of 5–6 hours beats unfocused 10-hour sessions. Do not try to match a dropper’s schedule. Work with the time you actually have.

Your specific adjustments:

  • Use mornings (before school or coaching) for revision  60–90 minutes of high-concentration work on high-weightage chapters
  • Shift full-length mocks to weekends only  do not attempt a 3.5-hour mock on a Tuesday with school the next morning
  • In Week 3 and 4, reduce mock frequency to 2 total (not 5)  but make each one count with full analysis
  • Prioritise Biology and Chemistry Inorganic  these give the highest returns for the least time investment

If You Are Scoring Below 400 Right Now

This is the situation that requires the most honest conversation. A 200-mark jump in 30 days is not realistic for most students. A 80–120 mark improvement absolutely is  if you focus on the right things.

Your specific adjustments:

  • Do not attempt to cover the full syllabus in 30 days. Choose your 12–15 highest-weightage chapters and own them completely
  • Biology should be 60% of your revision time  it has the highest question count and the highest return from NCERT-only revision
  • Skip chapters you have never touched  spending 3 days on a chapter from scratch will not give you marks in 30 days
  • Your mock target for Week 4 is not 600. It is consistent improvement  if Week 2 gives you 360 and Week 4 gives you 440, that is a strong result
  • The crash course structure at EduAiTutors is specifically designed for students in this position  Week 1 builds the foundation systematically rather than hoping self-revision covers it

If You Are Scoring 500+ and Targeting 600+

The jump from 500 to 600 is not about learning more, it is about eliminating the specific errors that are costing you 80–100 marks right now. At 500+, most students know the content. The gap is accuracy, negative marking decisions, and a handful of specific concept confusions.

Your specific adjustments:

  • Do a full error audit before Day 1  take your last three mocks and count how many marks you lost to careless errors vs concept gaps. The ratio will tell you where to focus
  • If more than 40% of your wrong answers are careless  slow down on mock-taking and do timed chapter-wise drills at 80% speed to build precision
  • NCERT Biology line-by-line in Week 4 is non-negotiable  at 500+, the 8–10 marks you are losing in Biology are almost certainly from specific NCERT lines you paraphrased incorrectly
  • Do not take more than 3 full-length mocks in Week 4  you need revision time, not just test practice

The 9 Last-Month Mistakes That Quietly Kill NEET Scores

These are not obvious mistakes. Every student reading this has probably made at least three of them  not out of laziness, but out of anxiety. The last 30 days bring a specific kind of pressure that makes smart students do counterproductive things. Knowing the pattern in advance is the only reliable way to avoid it.

  1. Starting a new chapter after Day 1.
    It feels productive. It is not. A chapter you start 25 days before NEET will not be exam-ready in time. Meanwhile, the chapters you already know at 65%  which could become 90% with one clean revision  get less attention than they deserve. The rule: if you have not touched a chapter by Day 1, it is off the list unless it is genuinely high-weightage and you can cover it in a single day.
  2. Rebuilding the timetable every few days.
    This one is subtle. Students hit a hard day  fall behind by 3–4 hours  and respond by redesigning the entire schedule. The new plan looks better on paper but it resets the momentum. One missed day does not need a new timetable. It needs you to continue from where you stopped.
  3. Taking mock after mock without proper analysis.
    Six well-analysed mocks will improve your score more than twenty mocks with no analysis. Every time you take a mock, spend at least 90 minutes understanding why you got wrong answers wrong. If you cannot afford that time  take fewer mocks, not less time per analysis.
  4. Revising your strong chapters for comfort.
    When anxiety peaks, students gravitate toward the chapters they already know well. It feels like revision. It is actually reassurance-seeking. Strong chapters need a light revision pass  not the bulk of your time. Your weak chapters are where the marks are hiding.
  5. Watching strategy videos instead of executing a strategy.
    Watching a 2-hour YouTube video about “how to score 700 in 30 days” is not preparation. It is procrastination with good intentions. The 2 hours you spend watching someone else’s preparation story are 2 hours you did not spend on your own revision.
  6. Sleeping fewer than 7 hours to get more study time.
    This feels like discipline. It is counterproductive. Sleep-deprived revision has a retention rate of approximately 30–40% of what properly rested revision achieves. You are not gaining 2 extra hours, you are making the other 8 hours less effective. Protect your sleep, especially from Week 3 onwards.
  7. Attempting every question in mock tests regardless of confidence.
    NEET has a negative marking penalty of 1 mark per wrong answer. A student who attempts 170 questions with 65% accuracy scores lower than a student who attempts 140 questions with 85% accuracy. In the last 30 days, practice the discipline of skipping questions you genuinely do not know is a skill, not a weakness.
  8. Letting one bad mock derail multiple days.
    A bad mock score on Day 20 does not mean your preparation has failed. It means you have data on what to fix in the remaining 10 days. The students who recover quickly from bad mocks  analyse, adjust, move  improve the most in the final stretch. The students who spiral into self-doubt for two days after a bad mock lose those two days permanently.
  9. Not maintaining an error log.
    Every wrong answer in every mock is information. Students who write down their wrong answers  and the reason they got them wrong  have a ready-made revision list that is perfectly calibrated to their specific gaps. Students who do not are fixing the same mistakes on Day 28 that they made on Day 8.

NEET 2026 Exam Week and Day-Before Plan

The 4-week plan ends on Day 28. What you do in the final 48 hours has a disproportionate effect on how you perform  not because last-minute cramming works, but because last-minute anxiety management matters enormously.

Days 29–30 and the Night Before NEET  What to Do and What Not ToDay 29:

  • Maximum 4 hours of light revision  no full-length mocks, no new chapters
  • Read through your error log from all six mocks  not to study, but to remind yourself that you have identified and addressed your weak points
  • Revise your high-yield fact sheet: Biology diagrams and NCERT lines, Chemistry Inorganic reactions, Physics key formulas  one pass only
  • Eat normally, sleep by 10 PM

Day 30 (day before NEET):

  • Maximum 2 hours in the morning  Biology NCERT high-yield lines only
  • After noon: no studying. Completely stop.
  • Prepare your exam kit: admit card, ID proof, stationery, water bottle  pack everything by 6 PM
  • Avoid discussing the exam with friends or family in the evening  comparison and anxiety are contagious the night before
  • Sleep by 10 PM. 8 hours of sleep the night before NEET is worth more than 2 hours of revision.

What not to do on Day 30:

  • Do not attempt a chapter-wise test “just to check”
  • Do not read your weakest chapter one more time hoping it sticks
  • Do not look at social media posts about how much everyone else has studied
  • Do not change what you are going to eat for breakfast  eat what you normally eat

Exam Morning Routine  From Wake-Up to Hall Entry

The exam is likely at 2 PM. Your morning routine sets your mental state for the paper.

  • Wake up at least 5 hours before exam time  if the exam is at 2 PM, wake up by 9 AM at the latest
  • Eat a proper breakfast  not too heavy. Avoid anything that causes energy crashes (excessive sugar, heavy fried food). A normal meal is fine.
  • 30 minutes of light revision after breakfast  Biology high-yield facts only. Nothing new.
  • Stop studying 2 hours before the exam  use this time to travel, reach the centre, and settle
  • Reach the exam centre 45–60 minutes early  rushing to the hall is the fastest way to enter the exam in a bad mental state
  • In the waiting room  do not discuss the paper with other students. Do not compare how much anyone has revised. Focus on your own preparation.
  • First 5 minutes inside the hall  read the instructions, check the paper, breathe. Do not start answering immediately. One slow minute of orientation is worth it.

Frequently Asked Questions  NEET 2026 Last 30 Days

Can I improve my NEET score significantly in the last 30 days?

Yes, a genuine improvement of 80 to 120 marks is realistic for most students in 30 days, provided the revision is focused on high-weightage chapters and every mock test is followed by proper analysis. The improvement comes from consolidating what you already partially know, not from starting new material. Students who have covered 60–70% of their syllabus and use these 30 days for structured revision and mock analysis consistently see meaningful score improvements.

How many hours should I study per day in the last month for NEET 2026?

8 to 10 hours of focused study per day is the recommended range. For school-going or coaching students with limited time, 5 to 6 genuinely focused hours produce better results than 10 hours of distracted study. The quality of attention matters more than the number of hours in the final month. Protecting your sleep  studying 6 hours well-rested is more effective than studying 12 hours on 5 hours of sleep.

Is a jump from 400 to 600 marks realistic in 30 days?

A 200-mark jump in 30 days is not realistic for most students  and any plan that promises it is setting you up for disappointment. A jump from 400 to 480–500 is achievable with focused effort on high-weightage chapters and disciplined mock analysis. The honest target is this: improve by 20–30 marks per week through systematic revision and error correction. Four weeks of that adds up to 80–120 marks  which is a strong, real outcome.

Should I join a crash course in the last 30 days of NEET 2026?

A crash course helps when it provides structure, mentor guidance, and systematic mock analysis of things that are genuinely hard to maintain alone under pressure. It does not help if it introduces new content that competes with your existing revision plan. If you are self-disciplined and your revision plan is clear, you can follow this 30-day timetable independently. If you find that mock analysis, subject prioritisation or staying on track are consistent challenges  a structured programme with daily accountability is worth it. The 5-week NEET crash course at EduAiTutors covers the final preparation phase with weekly live sessions and AI-powered mock analysis that tells you exactly which concepts to fix before the next test.

How many mock tests should I take in the last week before NEET?

In the last week (Days 22–28), take no more than three full-length mocks  on Days 23, 25 and 27. After Day 27, stop taking mocks completely. Days 28–30 are for light revision and mental recovery, not testing. Taking a mock on Day 29 or 30 does not help  it either makes you anxious about a bad score or overconfident about a good one. Neither state is useful the night before NEET.

Conclusion 

The 30-day plan above is complete and usable as it stands. You do not need a coaching programme to follow it.

What a structured programme adds is the layer that is hardest to maintain alone under pressure: daily accountability, a mentor to tell you which weak areas to prioritise after each mock, and an AI-powered analysis system that categorises your errors automatically instead of leaving you to figure it out yourself at 11 PM after a demoralising score.

That is what Weeks 4 and 5 of the 5-week NEET crash course  at EduAiTutors are built for  not to replace your preparation, but to give it the structure and feedback that makes the difference between a plan followed for 30 days and a plan followed well for 30 days.

NEET 2026 is weeks away. The time is there. Use it.



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