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NEET 2026 Refund Window: NTA Sets June 30 Deadline for Fee Reclaims

NEET 2026 May 3 refund: Update bank details, confirm account by June 30- NTA issues notice

By Priya NairPublished 28 June 2026· 2 min read
NEET 2026 Refund Window: NTA Sets June 30 Deadline for Fee Reclaims
NEET 2026 Refund Window: NTA Sets June 30 Deadline for Fee Reclaims

Candidates who appeared for the cancelled May 3 exam can now finalise their bank details as the testing agency clears the decks for results.

The National Testing Agency (NTA) has reopened the final window for NEET candidates to update or verify their bank account details for the refund of fees paid for the May 3, 2026 examination. This one-time facility, which went live on June 25, is a crucial step for the approximately 20 lakh students who sat for the re-examination on June 21. With the window set to close on June 30 at 11:55 PM, the agency is aiming to streamline the administrative backlog caused by the mid-year cancellation and subsequent re-test.

For those who previously opted for a "No Refund" status, the current portal offers a chance to revise their decision. The NTA has emphasised that this is the final opportunity to ensure that reimbursement reaches the correct bank account. While reports indicate that over 13 lakh candidates have already submitted their information, the agency is pushing for full compliance to ensure the financial closure of the May 3 cycle.

Managing the Logistics

The chaos surrounding the NEET 2026 cycle—marked by a multi-state investigation into a "solver gang" and various procedural hurdles—has kept both the agency and students on edge. Earlier, the mandatory bank detail verification had caused confusion regarding the issuance of admit cards, forcing the NTA to decouple the two processes. Now, with the re-exam concluded in a largely incident-free manner, the focus has shifted entirely to administrative closure and the highly anticipated NEET UG 2026 result date.

Why it Matters: The Bigger Picture

The reopening of this portal is more than a simple clerical exercise; it reflects the immense pressure on the NTA to restore institutional credibility. By proactively asking candidates to verify their data, the agency is attempting to prevent the kind of financial and data-handling disputes that often follow large-scale exam cancellations. For the student, it is a final check to ensure their record is clean before the results are processed.

The broader context of these administrative maneuvers suggests a cautious approach to the pending results. With the answer key challenges now closed and the OMR response sheets soon to be released, the agency is clearing its desk of outstanding tasks. Students should treat the June 30 deadline as absolute, as the agency has signaled that no further extensions will be entertained as it moves to finalise the merit lists.

By Priya Nair
Political Correspondent

Priya Nair covers parties, elections and the business of power for PoliticalPedia.