NEET (UG) is conducted in 13 languages, a deliberate design to make India’s largest medical entrance exam accessible beyond English and Hindi. But the 2026 registration data raises a real question about how evenly that accessibility is being used.
NEET 2026 Language-Wise Registration
|
Language |
2026 Registrations |
|---|---|
|
English |
18,08,535 |
|
Hindi |
3,45,247 |
|
Gujarati |
49,647 |
|
Bengali |
38,577 |
|
Tamil |
29,845 |
|
Marathi |
1,144 |
|
Telugu |
1,339 |
|
Kannada |
614 |
|
Urdu |
919 |
|
Odia |
716 |
|
Malayalam |
787 |
|
Punjabi |
226 |
|
Assamese |
2,147 |
English and Hindi Hold a Combined 90%+ Share
Out of roughly 22.8 lakh total registrations in 2026, English and Hindi together account for over 95% of all candidates — a share that has remained structurally dominant since at least 2019, when English alone accounted for over 12 lakh of 15.19 lakh total registrations.
The Multi-Year Decline in Regional Languages
Comparing 2019 to 2026 shows a mixed but generally declining pattern for several regional languages even as overall registration grew:
-
Marathi: fell from 31,239 (2019) to 1,144 (2026)
-
Odia: fell from 31,490 (2019) to 716 (2026)
-
Gujarati: held relatively stable, from 59,395 (2019) to 49,647 (2026)
-
Tamil: rose from 1,017 (2019) to 29,845 (2026), a rare regional-language growth story
Why the Marathi and Odia Drop Stands Out
Marathi and Odia both saw registration numbers collapse to roughly 3–4% of their 2019 levels by 2026, even as total NEET registrations grew by roughly 50% over the same period — suggesting candidates in these states have shifted decisively toward English or Hindi medium papers rather than a genuine drop in exam-taking.
What This Means for Coaching and Content Strategy
For test-prep and content platforms, this data confirms that English and Hindi-medium NEET content will continue to serve the overwhelming majority of aspirants, while regional-language demand — while present — is concentrated in specific states like Gujarat, Bengal, and increasingly Tamil Nadu.
