NEET PG 2026 registration is live! Get exact dates, eligibility, fees, documents & preparation tips

If you’re an MBBS graduate racing against the clock right now, here’s the headline: NEET PG 2026 registration opened on July 1, 2026, and the window closes on July 21, 2026. There’s no extension buffer built in this year, and NBEMS has already warned candidates that late applications won’t be entertained under any circumstances.
This guide walks you through everything you need — the exact NEET PG 2026 online form dates, eligibility criteria, fee structure, required documents, exam pattern, and a realistic preparation roadmap for the exam on August 30, 2026. Whether you’re filling the form for the first time or refining your study plan, you’ll find practical, no-fluff answers here.

What Is NEET PG 2026?
NEET PG (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test for Postgraduate) is the single national entrance exam that decides admission into MD, MS, PG Diploma, and DNB courses across India. It’s conducted by the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS), and no state or institutional exam can substitute it for postgraduate medical admissions.
This year’s cycle matters more than usual because NBEMS has introduced new rules around test-city selection and identity verification — details every applicant needs to understand before hitting submit.
NEET PG 2026 Important Dates
| Event | Date |
|---|---|
| Information Bulletin release | July 1, 2026, 4:00 PM |
| Online application window opens | July 1, 2026, 5:00 PM |
| Last date to submit application | July 21, 2026, 11:55 PM |
| Exam date | August 30, 2026 |
| Exam mode | Computer-Based Test (CBT) |
| Expected result declaration | By September 30, 2026 |
| Expected counselling start (MCC) | October 2026 |
Practical tip: NBEMS has explicitly stated no applications will be accepted after July 21 — not even with a late fee. If you’re still gathering documents, prioritize that today rather than waiting for a “grace period” that historically hasn’t come.
Eligibility Criteria for NEET PG 2026
Before you start filling the form, confirm you meet these conditions:

- Educational qualification: MBBS degree or a provisional pass certificate recognized under the National Medical Commission (NMC) Act, 2019, and Post Graduate Medical Education Regulations, 2023.
- Registration: A valid permanent or provisional registration certificate from the Medical Council of India (MCI), National Medical Commission, or any State Medical Council.
- Internship: Compulsory rotatory internship must be completed on or before July 31, 2026. If your internship extends beyond this date, you won’t be eligible this cycle.
- Nationality: Indian citizens, NRIs, OCIs, PIOs, and foreign nationals holding an MBBS from a recognized institution can apply.
- Attempts: There’s no cap on the number of attempts and no upper age limit.
Fill the NEET PG 2026 Online Form
- Visit the official website: natboard.edu.in — never use third-party “application” links.
- Register: Create your profile with a valid email ID and mobile number. You’ll receive a system-generated user ID and password — save these securely.
- Log in and fill personal details: Name, date of birth, gender, nationality, category, and PwD status if applicable.
- Enter academic details: MBBS qualifying exam details, university, state of Class 10 and 12, and total marks secured in MBBS.
- Add internship details: Status (completed/ongoing), start date, and completion date.
- Add medical registration details: Registration type (permanent/provisional), registration number, date, and issuing authority.
- Select test cities: This year, choose your three preferred states — allotment is no longer first-come, first-served.
- Upload documents: Photograph, signature, thumb impression, and certificates in the prescribed format and size.
- Complete Aadhaar authentication: New for 2026 — this step is mandatory for identity verification.
- Pay the application fee via credit card, debit card, net banking, or UPI.
- Submit and download the confirmation page. Keep both a digital and printed copy.
Documents Required
Keep these scanned and ready before you start the form — this alone saves most candidates 30+ minutes:
- Passport-size photograph (as per prescribed dimensions and background)
- Signature (scanned, plain background)
- Thumb impression
- Government-issued photo ID (Aadhaar, PAN, Passport, or Driving License)
- MBBS mark sheets and degree/provisional pass certificate
- Internship completion or ongoing-internship certificate
- MCI/SMC/NMC registration certificate
- Category certificate (if applying under reserved category)
NEET PG 2026 Application Fee
Following a recent fee reduction by NBEMS, the current structure is:
| Category | Fee |
|---|---|
| General / OBC / EWS | ₹3,500 |
| SC / ST / PwD | ₹2,500 |
Fees are non-refundable once paid, so double-check your category selection before submitting payment — a wrong category entry can complicate your application later.

NEET PG 2026 Exam Pattern
Understanding the pattern helps you plan your timing strategy, not just your syllabus:
- Mode: Computer-Based Test (CBT)
- Total questions: 200 MCQs
- Total marks: 800
- Sections: 5 sections of 40 questions each
- Time per section: 42 minutes (fixed — once the time is up, that section auto-submits and can’t be revisited)
- Total duration: 3 hours 30 minutes
- Marking scheme: +4 for correct, −1 for incorrect, 0 for unattempted
The sectional time-lock is the detail most first-time NEET PG candidates underestimate. Unlike NEET UG, you can’t jump back to an earlier section once its 42 minutes expire, so pacing within each block matters as much as overall pacing.
What’s New in NEET PG 2026
- No more first-come, first-served city allotment — candidates now select three preferred states, and NBEMS allots cities based on capacity and demand.
- Mandatory Aadhaar authentication during registration for stricter identity verification.
- Tighter photo and document guidelines, with stricter rejection criteria for non-compliant uploads.
- Reduced application fees compared to earlier cycles, making the process slightly more affordable.
These changes exist to reduce impersonation and last-minute city-allocation disputes, which have been recurring issues in past cycles.
Preparation Strategy & Best Practices
With roughly two months between the form deadline and the exam, structure matters more than raw hours.

Build a subject-wise timetable
- Finish first-pass revision of high-weightage subjects — Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics & Gynaecology, and Pharmacology — within the first 4–5 weeks.
- Reserve the last 3 weeks purely for revision and mock tests, not new content.
Use standard resources
- Stick to your MBBS class notes and 1–2 standard reference books per subject rather than switching sources repeatedly.
- Avoid accumulating multiple question banks; depth beats breadth here.
Practice under exam conditions
- Since each section auto-submits after 42 minutes, practice full-length sectional mocks — not just untimed question sets — to build genuine pacing instincts.
- Aim for 130–150 accurate, confident attempts rather than attempting all 200 questions blindly. Given the −1 negative marking, unsure guesses often cost more than they gain.
Track and fix weak areas
- After every mock, spend more time analyzing wrong answers than celebrating correct ones. Pattern-spotting in your mistakes is where most score improvement actually happen
Key Takeaways
- NEET PG 2026 registration is open from July 1 to July 21, 2026 — no extensions expected.
- The exam is scheduled for August 30, 2026, in CBT mode, with results expected by September 30, 2026.
- Internship must be completed by July 31, 2026 to remain eligible.
- Application fee: ₹3,500 (General/OBC/EWS) and ₹2,500 (SC/ST/PwD).
- Major 2026 changes: state-based test-city selection and mandatory Aadhaar authentication.
- Exam has 200 MCQs, 800 marks, 5 timed sections of 42 minutes each, with +4/−1 marking.
Conclusion
The NEET PG 2026 cycle rewards candidates who treat the application form with the same seriousness as the exam itself. A rejected upload, a missed internship date, or a last-minute payment failure can cost you the entire attempt — regardless of how well-prepared you are academically. Read the Information Bulletin carefully, submit your form well before July 21, and use the remaining weeks for focused, mock-test-driven revision rather than trying to “finish the syllabus” for the first time. Good luck — and don’t wait until the last three days to hit submit.





