For decades, the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) has been the gatekeeper for medical aspirants in India. But the 2026 edition of the exam has sparked a crisis of confidence. Leaked question papers, discrepancies in results, and allegations of state-level malpractice have left students and parents questioning the system’s integrity. What does this mean for the future of Indian education?
Dr. Ananya Sharma, an education policy researcher at the Centre for Policy Studies in New Delhi, put it bluntly: “The NEET model is broken. It was designed for a different era, one with less competition and more trust in centralised exams.” The 2026 leak, she argues, is not an isolated incident but a symptom of deeper rot: an over-reliance on a single high-stakes test.
The controversy erupted in early June when social media platforms were flooded with screenshots of question papers from two states. The National Testing Agency (NTA) initially dismissed these as fake. But a forensic audit by a private cybersecurity firm later confirmed that at least 15% of the test centres had been compromised. The NTA has since cancelled scores from 200 centres, affecting over 40,000 students.
Ravi Kumar, a student from Bihar who scored in the top 0.1 percentile, now faces uncertainty. “I worked two years for this. My family sold land to pay for coaching. Now, they say my score might be voided because of a leak in another state. This is not justice,” he told The British Wire.
The fallout extends beyond individual trauma. The Supreme Court has stepped in, directing the NTA to conduct a re-test for affected students within 45 days. Legal experts warn this could set a precedent for further litigation, potentially delaying the entire medical admissions cycle by months.
But some see an opportunity for reform. The 2026 NEET controversy has revived debates about decentralisation. States like Tamil Nadu and Karnataka have long advocated for their own entrance exams, arguing that centralised tests fail to account for regional disparities in curriculum and language. “The one-size-fits-all approach is failing rural students,” said Dr. Sharma. “A federal model, where states conduct their own exams with central oversight, could reduce the pressure on a single point of failure.”
Others call for a shift towards continuous assessment. Professor Amit Chaudhuri of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay suggests that India should emulate Finland’s system, where school grades, teacher evaluations, and a low-stakes standardised test are combined. “The obsession with a single exam day is unhealthy,” he said. “We need multiple metrics to judge a student’s potential.”
The NTA, meanwhile, is under fire. Its director, Dr. Meera Pillai, resigned last week amid allegations of mismanagement. The government has announced a high-level committee to review the agency’s functioning. But critics say tinkering with the administration is not enough. “The entire exam culture needs an overhaul,” said Vidya Krishnan, a columnist and author of a book on Indian education. “We are breeding a generation of rote learners obsessed with marks, not knowledge.”
The 2026 NEET controversy is a wake-up call. India’s education system stands at a crossroads. If the government merely patches the leaks and resumes business as usual, the next crisis is just around the corner. But if it takes bold steps towards reform, it could transform the lives of millions. The lesson from 2026 is clear: the future of Indian education cannot be built on a flawed past.








