If you walked out of a centre on June 21 after the NEET UG 2026 re-examination, you’ve probably been refreshing the NTA website every few hours since. Good news — the wait’s over. The provisional answer key is finally up, and the NEET UG 2026 re-exam answer key released today has already pulled a huge crowd onto the official NEET portal. More than 22 lakh candidates who took the retest can now log in, line up their answers against NTA’s, and figure out if anything’s worth pushing back on. The catch? The objection window only runs from June 25 to June 28, 11:50 PM. Not much breathing room, so don’t leave it for the last night.
For those who haven’t been through this before — NTA doesn’t go straight from exam to result. There’s always this middle stretch where students get a real chance to flag answers they think are wrong, as long as they’ve got something credible to prove it. Pretty standard practice for an exam this size, honestly. But NEET UG 2026 hasn’t exactly had a smooth run. The original exam back in May was scrapped after leak concerns came up, so this re-test, and everything tied to it, is getting watched a lot more closely than usual.
Getting the Answer Key in the First Place
A lot of students are asking the same thing right now — basically, how do you actually download NEET UG 2026 re-exam answer key PDF without running into errors or logging into the wrong section? It’s not complicated once you know where to look, but a couple of steps trip people up:
- Go to neet.nta.nic.in — don’t use any third-party mirror sites, stick to the official one.
- Find the homepage link for the re-exam provisional answer key and click through.
- Log in with your application number and password.
- The PDF opens up, and you can save it straight to your device from there.
- Worth printing a copy too, just so you’ve got something physical to mark up while comparing answers.
Comparing Your Answers and Filing a Challenge
Once you’ve got the PDF open, the next obvious question is how to check NEET UG 2026 re-exam answer key entries against what you actually wrote down in the exam hall. Don’t rush this part. Go question by question, and if something genuinely looks wrong to you — not just “I feel like it should be different,” but something you can actually defend — here’s roughly how the objection process goes:
- Visit neet.nta.nic.in and locate the answer key challenge link for the re-exam.
- Log in using your existing credentials.
- Pick out exactly which question(s) you want to dispute.
- Upload proof — and NTA is fairly strict here. It has to come from NCERT textbooks or other recognised standard references. Coaching notes, random blogs, YouTube explainers — none of that will be accepted.
- Pay ₹200 for each question you’re challenging.
- Submit — and that’s genuinely it, there’s no second round.
That ₹200 isn’t handed back automatically, by the way. It only comes back if subject experts go through your objection and decide you actually had a point. And this is the part students keep getting caught out by — once you submit, it’s locked. No editing the question, no swapping the document, no “wait, let me fix that.” So before you pay anything, slow down and reread what you’re submitting. Question number, your reasoning, the textbook reference — check it twice. One careless click and there’s no walking it back.
Something else worth flagging — NTA mentioned that OMR sheet scanning is happening at the same time as this objection window, not after it closes. Seems like a deliberate effort to keep the whole evaluation cycle from dragging on, so the final key (and results) can come out sooner than they otherwise might.
A few other things while you’re at it: there’s a separate window open for candidates who want their registration fee refunded, and that one runs until June 30. And if you hit a wall anywhere in the objection process — login issues, payment glitches, whatever — NTA’s helpline (011-40759000) or their email id (neetug2026@nta.ac.in) are there to help sort it out.
With over 22 lakh candidates in the mix this year, putting together the final answer key and merit list is going to take some time, regardless of how fast the objections get cleared. So for now, the smart move is simple: actually sit down and go through your responses properly, dig out your NCERT textbooks if something genuinely feels off, and don’t leave any of this for the last hour before June 28 closes things out.
Also Read: Re-NEET 2026 Paper Analysis: How Tough Was the June 21 Exam, Really?
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