NEET 2025 Repeaters Stats

The repeater’s dilemma: You’ve already read NCERT twice. Now you see NCERT Exemplar sitting on the shelf. Should you invest 40-60 hours into it, or focus on something else?

The answer depends on one critical fact: Only 5-10% of NEET questions come directly from NCERT Exemplar. But 85%+ come from NCERT itself (direct or paraphrased).

Here’s the exact breakdown of where to focus your remaining time.

The Question Source Analysis: Where NEET Actually Pulls From

Based on analysis of NEET 2022-2025 papers:

NCERT Body Text (Direct/Paraphrased): 55-65%

  • Example: “Write the chemical formula for ethanol” > Direct NCERT line
  • These appear nearly identical to textbook content
  • Difficulty: Easy to moderate
  • Time to solve: 30-60 seconds

NCERT Examples + Solved Problems: 15-20%

  • Example: A numerical problem identical to NCERT worked example
  • Slightly modified setups of textbook problems
  • Difficulty: Moderate
  • Time to solve: 90-120 seconds

NCERT Diagrams + Figure Labels: 10-15%

  • Example: “Label the parts of the mitochondria” (pulled from NCERT diagram)
  • Questions based on NCERT illustrations
  • Difficulty: Easy to moderate
  • Time to solve: 30-45 seconds

NCERT Footnotes + Marginal Notes: 5-10%

  • Example: Exception statements that appear in smaller text
  • “Boron doesn’t follow octet rule” (often in footnote)
  • Difficulty: Moderate to hard
  • Time to solve: 60-90 seconds

NCERT Exemplar + Beyond NCERT: 5-10%

  • Example: Application questions requiring concept extension
  • Questions requiring synthesis of multiple NCERT concepts
  • Difficulty: Hard
  • Time to solve: 120+ seconds

The insight: 85-95% of NEET comes directly from NCERT mastery. Only 5-15% requires Exemplar or beyond-NCERT thinking.

NCERT Exemplar: What It Actually Tests

Question Types in Exemplar:

  1. Multiple Choice with Advanced Options (30%)
    • Example: Four options all seem correct; requires fine distinction
    • NEET relevance: 40% (these distinctions appear in NEET)
    • Time per question: 2-3 minutes
  2. Numerical Problems (25%)
    • Example: Multi-step calculations with setup variations
    • NEET relevance: 70% (NEET loves numerical variations)
    • Time per question: 3-5 minutes
  3. Short Answer (20%)
    • Example: “Explain why SN1 is preferred in this case”
    • NEET relevance: 10% (NEET is MCQ-only)
    • Time per question: 3-5 minutes (wasted for NEET format)
  4. Assertion-Reason Pairs (15%)
    • Example: “Statement A is true, Statement B is false because…”
    • NEET relevance: 90% (NEET uses A-R format extensively)
    • Time per question: 2-3 minutes
  5. Application-Based (10%)
    • Example: Real-world scenarios requiring concept application
    • NEET relevance: 60% (appears in biology especially)
    • Time per question: 3-4 minutes

The reality: 40-50% of Exemplar questions are poorly aligned with NEET’s MCQ format and heavy emphasis on direct recall.

The Time Investment Analysis

NCERT Mastery Path (What You MUST Do):

  • Complete NCERT readings: 60 hours
  • NCERT end-of-chapter problems: 40 hours
  • NCERT diagram labeling + footnotes: 20 hours
  • Total: 120 hours (mandatory)
  • ROI: 85-95% of NEET marks

NCERT Exemplar Path (What’s Optional):

  • Exemplar numerical problems: 30 hours
  • Exemplar A-R pairs: 15 hours
  • Exemplar short answers (skip for NEET): 0 hours
  • Total: 45 hours (optional)
  • ROI: 5-10% of NEET marks (maximum)

Alternative Use of 45 Hours:

  • Mock tests: 45 hours (10 full-length mocks)
  • ROI: 20-30% of NEET marks (higher impact)

The math: 45 hours of Exemplar might gain you 30-40 marks. 45 hours of mocks might gain you 80-120 marks through error learning and speed optimization.

Exemplar ROI is lower than mock testing ROI.

The Subject-Wise Breakdown: When Exemplar Helps

Physics:

  • NCERT mastery: 70% of marks
  • Exemplar value: Numerical variation practice (helps with speed)
  • Verdict: 60% value if already weak in numericals. 20% value if accurate in NCERT problems.

Chemistry:

  • NCERT mastery: 75% of marks
  • Exemplar value: Organic mechanism variations, inorganic reaction twists
  • Verdict: 60% value for Organic Chemistry. 30% value for Inorganic/Physical.

Biology:

  • NCERT mastery: 95% of marks
  • Exemplar value: Application questions (minimal)
  • Verdict: 10% value. NCERT mastery alone gets you 280+ marks out of 360.

Honest assessment: Biology doesn’t need Exemplar. Physics gains moderate benefit. Chemistry gains moderate benefit (especially Organic).

The Decision Framework: Should YOU Use Exemplar?

USE Exemplar if: 

✅ You’ve completed NCERT 2+ times
✅ You’re scoring 90%+ on NCERT end-of-chapter problems
✅ Your mock scores are 600+ (you need last 50 marks)
✅ You have 6+ months remaining
✅ You want speed optimization in numericals
✅ You’re targeting 650+ scores

SKIP Exemplar if: 

❌ You’re still on NCERT read 1-2 (prioritize NCERT completion)
❌ You’re scoring <80% on NCERT end-of-chapter problems
❌ Your mock scores are below 550 (focus on fundamentals first)
❌ You have <3 months remaining (use mocks instead)
❌ You want time-efficient mark gains (mocks > Exemplar)
❌ You’re targeting 600 marks (NCERT + mocks suffices)

The Honest Assessment

NCERT Exemplar is designed for CBSE board exams + JEE, not specifically for NEET.

NEET rewards NCERT depth, not Exemplar breadth.

A student who reads NCERT three times + takes 10 mocks will outscore a student who reads NCERT once + completes all of Exemplar.

The 45-hour question is critical: Would those 45 hours in Exemplar or 45 hours in mock tests give you better ROI?

Answer: Mock tests. Always.

The Recommended Path (12 Months)

Months 1-4: Complete NCERT 2x + NCERT problems
Months 5-8: Take 40 full-length mocks + analyze errors
Months 9-10: Exemplar numerical practice IF you have time and weak areas remain
Months 11-12: 10-year previous papers + final revision

This sequence prioritizes NCERT mastery (85% of marks) > mock test learning (10% of marks) > Exemplar finesse (5% of marks).

NCERT Exemplar is the “nice-to-have,” not the “must-have” for NEET. Master NCERT completely. Take mocks obsessively. Use Exemplar only for the final 50-mark push if time permits. Don’t sacrifice NCERT depth or mock test analysis for Exemplar breadth.

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