Google has quietly turned Gemini into a full-blown NEET mock test center, and you can sit a full-length exam without paying a rupee or downloading a separate coaching app. All you really have to do is open Gemini and type (or say), “I want to take a NEET mock exam.”
Right now, the feature is rolling out in the Gemini app and on the web, and it is grounded in content from Physics Wallah and Careers360 – which means the questions and patterns are not random AI guesses, but pulled from rigorously vetted material that looks and feels like the actual NEET UG paper. The idea is that you are not just “chatting” with an AI about doubts; you are sitting a structured, exam-style test with a fixed number of questions across Physics, Chemistry, and Biology and a proper test interface, timer, and question counter.
If you are using it for the first time, the flow is straightforward: install or open the Gemini app, sign in with your Google account, and then simply prompt, “I want to take a NEET mock exam.” Gemini will surface a dedicated practice test card; tap it, and you are dropped into a mock exam environment where you answer multiple-choice questions and submit at the end to see how you did. For most users, there is no extra configuration required – as long as you have access to Gemini in your region and language, NEET practice tests just show up as part of the experience.
Under the hood, this is part of Google’s broader push to turn Gemini into a single study surface for competitive exams, starting with SAT and JEE Main earlier this year and now expanding to NEET. By partnering with established test-prep brands, Google is trying to tackle the biggest concern around AI in education – hallucinated or low-quality questions – with content that mirrors the difficulty level, distribution, and style students encounter on test day. For students, that translates into something very simple: open Gemini on your phone, run a full NEET mock whenever you want, and get an exam-like run-through without hunting for PDFs, juggling apps, or paying for yet another test series.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
