MedMinds is an NTA-style test series and performance lab for NEET aspirants — real exam pressure, honest analysis, and a clear map of where your rank is actually headed.
Every serious NEET aspirant reads the same NCERT lines. What separates a 550 from a 650 is how you perform under a clock, on a paper you've never seen, when the room is silent and the stakes are real.
Concepts feel solid in your notes but fall apart under 3-hour exam pressure and NTA's negative marking.
Without a breakdown of right vs wrong vs skipped by chapter, you keep losing marks in the same blind spots test after test.
A score means little in isolation. You need to know where you stand against the exact competition you'll face on exam day.
No clutter, no confusing dashboards — built for a first-time aspirant and a seasoned one alike.
Sign up in under a minute — email or phone. No long forms before you can start practising.
Chapter-wise, subject-wise, or full-length NTA-pattern papers — choose what matches where you are today.
The same interface, marking scheme, and 3-hour clock you'll face on the actual NEET exam day.
See right, wrong and skipped answers, chapter-wise accuracy, and how your trend line is moving.
Most mock tests stop at a score. MedMinds tells you why you got it, and whether you're actually getting better.
Same interface. Same timer. Same pressure. So exam day feels like just another session.
Every attempt is broken down question-by-question and subject-by-subject — right, wrong, or skipped — so you know precisely what to revise next instead of just how many you missed.
One mock test can lie. Twenty can't. Every attempt plots onto your personal improvement graph, so a rough paper reads as a dip in a rising trend — not a reason to panic.
Every attempt is saved to your history. MedMinds plots your score, accuracy, and speed over time — so you can see, plainly, whether last week's revision worked.
It's not about how many tests you take — it's about which test you take when. Here's a sensible progression across the prep year.
1–2 chapter tests a week, started once you've covered roughly 60–70% of that chapter's syllabus. This is about building the habit, not the pressure.
2–3 full-length or subject tests a week, each one followed by real analysis — not just a score, but which chapters actually leaked marks.
3–5 full mocks a week, timed exactly like NEET day. By the time you sit the real exam, it should feel like just another Sunday paper.
Roughly 40–60 full-length tests across the full journey is a reasonable target.
Government medical colleges typically need an All-India Rank under roughly 10,000; the very top institutes like AIIMS sit under about 1,000. Those numbers are only useful if you can see, after every paper, roughly where your score would land — and whether that's moving in the right direction.
Pick a plan that matches your prep stage. Upgrade any time as your exam gets closer.
"I'm a NEET aspirant who wanted to see, paper after paper, exactly where I stood — and what to fix next. MedMinds is the honest test series I wanted for myself, and now it's here for every aspirant."Founder, MedMinds — NEET 2026 aspirant
Start with the ₹99 Starter plan — cancel any time, no questions asked.