National Eligibility cum Entrance Test — a complete month-by-month study plan with subject-wise strategies and actionable tips.
Read NCERT properly — the single most important habit any NEET aspirant builds.
Finish Class 12 NCERT and shift into chapter-wise practice mode.
Move from coverage to consolidation through repeated exposure.
Compress everything you know into fast, retrievable form.
Steady the nerves, polish the routine, walk in calm.
All 38 Biology chapters covered with AI-generated flashcards and spaced repetition. The fastest way to memorise NEET Biology.
200-question mocks following the exact NEET pattern. Physics, Chemistry, Biology sections timed realistically.
Every NEET paper from 2000 onwards, solved with detailed explanations. See which topics repeat most.
See your likely NEET score and rank range after every mock. Track your journey from Day 1 to exam day.
Visit the full NEET page for pricing, features, and mock tests.
Common questions about preparing for this exam
Crucial — and more than most aspirants take seriously. Around 95% of NEET Biology and roughly 80% of Physics and Chemistry traces back to NCERT, often word for word. If you can answer every question from every NCERT chapter without hesitation, you're already most of the way to a competitive percentile. Coaching material and reference books matter, but they sit on top of NCERT, not instead of it. Read it slowly, twice if you can, especially Biology.
Five to six hours of focused study daily is the realistic target during a regular school year. In the final three months, that climbs to seven or eight on weekdays and a bit more on weekends. Quality matters far more than hours — two focused hours move you further than four distracted ones. Break study into 90-minute blocks with proper breaks. Sleep below seven hours regularly will undo whatever extra time you bought yourself.
Give Biology the largest time share — it deserves it on weight alone. But don't fall into the trap of neglecting Physics or Chemistry, which is where many otherwise-prepared aspirants quietly lose their seat. Treat each section with a clear strategy: Biology is a memorisation and pattern game, Chemistry is your fastest-scoring section if you put in the reps, and Physics rewards conceptual clarity over volume. The medical seat usually comes from balanced section management, not one heroic Biology score.
Once you've covered roughly 60% of the syllabus — usually by Month 5 of an eight-month plan. Starting earlier is demoralising and not very informative; you'll get questions on chapters you haven't seen. Start with chapter-wise tests after each chapter, then graduate to full-length mocks. By the final two months, you should be doing two to three full mocks a week. The first mock will hurt. That's the point.
No, and a growing share of strong NEET results come from disciplined self-studiers using AI tools and NCERT properly. Coaching adds two genuine things: external structure for students who need accountability, and peer pressure for those motivated by it. If you can self-pace, NEET is the most coaching-optional of all major Indian entrance exams. Pair Super Tutor's adaptive practice with serious NCERT reading and you're covered. Pair coaching with the same self-study work and you're also covered, just at higher cost.
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