NEET-UG 2026 Cancelled Amid Leak Row; NTA DG Denies Full Paper Leak

The National Testing Agency Director General Abhishek Singh clarified that the full NEET-UG 2026 question paper was never leaked on Telegram or other social media channels. However, a "guess paper" PDF circulating on WhatsApp contained a few questions that matched the actual exam, violating its integrity. The NTA cancelled the May 3 examination for 22.79 lakh students and recommended a CBI probe to ensure fairness. In Maharashtra, CBI teams took custody of accused Shubham Khairnar, as the investigation into the alleged leak continues.

Key Points: NEET-UG 2026 Cancelled Over Paper Leak Allegations

  • NTA DG denies full NEET-UG 2026 paper leaked online
  • Guess paper with matching questions circulated on WhatsApp before exam
  • Exam cancelled for 22.79 lakh students to protect fairness
  • CBI probe ordered, accused Shubham Khairnar taken into custody
4 min read

Entire paper was never available on any social media channel: NTA DG Abhishek Singh on NEET-UG leak row

NTA DG Abhishek Singh says full NEET-UG 2026 paper never leaked online, but a guess paper with matching questions violated exam integrity. CBI probe ordered.

"What has happened is that a guess paper in the form of a PDF was circulating on WhatsApp, and it had a few questions which were matching with the questions which were asked. - Abhishek Singh, NTA DG"

New Delhi, May 12

Amid allegations of a paper leak and irregularities that led to the cancellation of NEET-UG 2026 examination, the National Testing Agency Director General Abhishek Singh on Tuesday clarified that the full question paper was never circulated on Telegram or any other platform, but the incident has surely violated the integrity of the examination.

Speaking to ANI over a Zoom call, Singh said the preliminary verification by the agency had not found any instance of the complete question paper being available on social media channels.

"No, the entire paper was never available on Telegram or any other channel as far as we have verified the reports," Singh said.

Explaining the nature of the alleged breach, the NTA DG said the issue involved a limited set of questions that appeared in a circulating "guess paper" and matched portions of the actual examination.

"I don't know how you define a leak. But I will call it something which has happened, which has violated the 100% integrity of the examination and our commitment to a zero-error examination. In so far as the typical, traditional way of leak is concerned, no question paper in the form of a complete question paper has leaked anywhere," he said.

"What has happened is that a guess paper in the form of a PDF was circulating on WhatsApp, and it had a few questions which were matching with the questions which were asked. When we verified whether this was in circulation before May 3, it was found that some of it was. So, given that a few questions were available to some people before the examination, it makes it unfair for the 22.79 lakh students who were preparing for this examination with their hard work," Singh added.

He said the agency had taken the decision to cancel the examination and recommend a CBI probe in the interest of maintaining fairness.

"So, because of that act of a few anti-social elements, we could not have compromised the interests of the honest students. So, we took this tough call of cancelling this examination and ordering a CBI inquiry," he said.

Meanwhile, in Maharashtra, four teams of CBI reached the Crime Branch Unit-2 office in Nashik to take custody of accused Shubham Khairnar, who was earlier arrested by Nashik Police in connection with the alleged paper leak case.

The controversy stems from allegations raised by the Rajasthan Special Operations Group (SOG), which is probing claims that a "guess paper" containing around 410 questions was circulated among students prior to the examination. Investigators suspect that nearly 120 questions from this document matched the Chemistry section of the actual NEET-UG paper.

Rajasthan Additional Director General of Police Vishal Bansal had earlier stated that the document may have been in circulation weeks before the exam, though the probe is still at an early stage.

Following inputs from central agencies, the Centre on Tuesday cancelled the NEET-UG 2026 examination conducted on May 3, citing concerns over the integrity of the process. The National Testing Agency said the decision was taken after coordination with law enforcement agencies flagged irregularities in the examination system.

The government has also referred the case to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI). The agency has registered an FIR under provisions of criminal conspiracy, cheating, corruption, and the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024.

Special CBI teams have been deployed across multiple locations as part of the investigation, with officials confirming that custody of key accused individuals is being sought for interrogation.

The NEET-UG examination, which is the single entrance test for MBBS, BDS and other undergraduate medical courses, was held on May 3 across more than 5,400 centres in India and abroad, with around 22.79 lakh candidates appearing.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
This is so disheartening for all the hardworking medical aspirants. 😢 I have a cousin who prepared for NEET for two years straight. She was crying when she heard the exam was cancelled. But I support the cancellation—it's better than letting cheaters steal opportunities. However, I hope the NTA and CBI act fast. The longer they take, the more stress for students. Also, why was the security so lax that a guess paper could circulate weeks before? That needs fixing!
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Vikram M
The NTA DG is trying to downplay this as a "limited set of questions," but let's be real: if 120 questions from Chemistry were matching, that's a massive leak. How can they claim "complete paper was never available"? Those 120 questions are enough to give some students an unfair advantage. The entire system needs a thorough overhaul—not just a probe. And I'm tired of hearing "zero-error examination" when such big breaches happen. Yaar, accountability chahiye!
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Siddharth J
As a medical student who cleared NEET a few years back, I feel for the current batch. This leak is a betrayal of trust. The NTA should have had better digital security—no PDF should be circulating on WhatsApp before the exam. Kudos to the CBI for jumping in quickly. But I'm skeptical about how fast they'll resolve this. Let's hope the re-exam is held soon and with ironclad security. Also, strict punishment for the culprits—this can't be a slap on the wrist.
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Michael C
I'm an Indian studying abroad, and even here, news of the NEET leak has made waves. It's sad that such a crucial exam—the gateway to becoming a doctor—is marred by corruption. The NTA's decision to cancel and order a CBI probe shows some backbone, but the damage to trust is real. I hope the

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