The last 30 days before NEET can completely change your score — if you use them correctly. This is not the time to start new topics or panic. It is the time to revise smartly, practice consistently, and fix your mistakes before it matters.
Most students make the mistake of trying to study everything again from scratch in the last month. That does not work. The goal in the final 30 days is to strengthen what you already know and improve accuracy, not cover new ground.
Focus on three things:
Divide your preparation into three clear phases:
Use this phase to revise all important topics quickly. Do not go into deep theory. Focus on formulas, key concepts, and frequently asked question types.
This is the most important phase. Start solving full-length mock tests and topic-wise questions regularly.
Improvement happens during analysis, not just during solving.
In the last 10 days, reduce new practice and focus on revision and accuracy building.
Biology carries the highest weightage in NEET. Focus heavily on NCERT. Most questions come directly from NCERT text, diagrams, and definitions. Revise diagrams, memorize key terms, and practice MCQs from each chapter.
Chemistry is a scoring subject with the right preparation. Physical Chemistry: practice numericals daily. Organic Chemistry: understand and revise reactions. Inorganic Chemistry: revise NCERT — especially block elements and coordination compounds.
Physics requires strong concepts and consistent practice. Focus on formulas you tend to forget, solve previous year questions topic-wise, and work on improving speed and accuracy for calculation-heavy questions.
Stay consistent, avoid distractions, and trust the preparation you have already done. The last 30 days are about refining performance, not rebuilding it. Confidence and accuracy will matter more than raw study hours in the final stretch.
A well-planned 30-day strategy can significantly improve your NEET score. After the exam, use NEET Rank vs Marks to estimate your position before official results come out.