The National Testing Agency (NTA) has successfully concluded the Re-NEET UG 2026 exam today, June 21. Over thousands of candidates appeared for the re-test across designated centers. Early student reactions and expert feedback suggest that today’s paper layout had some major surprises compared to the original May 3 exam. Here is the complete subject-wise analysis and difficulty breakdown.
Re-NEET 2026 Difficulty Breakdown (At a Glance)
According to top national medical faculties, today’s paper was overall Moderate to Difficult, primarily dragged down by a lengthier calculation section.
| Subject | Difficulty Level | Major Highlights |
| Physics | Tough & Lengthier | Heavy on numericals; time-consuming calculations |
| Chemistry | Moderate | Direct NCERT-based; balanced Organic & Inorganic |
| Biology | Moderate | Tricky assertion-reasoning statements in Botany |
| Overall | Moderate-Tough | Lengthier than the May 3 examination |
Subject-Wise Analysis & Expert Verdict
1. Physics: The Rank Decider
Most students found the Physics section to be the hardest part of today’s re-test. Unlike the formula-based direct questions from before, today’s questions required deeper conceptual understanding and long calculations, leaving students racing against time.
2. Chemistry: NCERT Saves the Day
Chemistry remained highly scoring and loyal to the NCERT textbook lines. Physical Chemistry had standard formulas, while Organic Chemistry focused heavily on named reactions.
3. Biology: Tricky & Time Consuming
While Zoology was relatively straight and easy, Botany tripped students up with lengthy statement-based and match-the-following questions.
🔴 What Next for Aspirants? Because the overall difficulty level was slightly higher than the previous session, experts predict the official cutoff might drop by 5 to 10 marks across categories.
📢 Live Score Check: To check your tentative score right now, download the code-wise answer key PDFs directly from our LIVE BLOG HERE.
NTA Re-Exam Latest News: Answer Key release date, student reactions, and expected cut-off trends are being updated second-by-second.



