180 Out of 180 - The Chemistry Advantage in NEET 2026:
Among the three subjects that define a student's NEET destiny, Chemistry is perhaps the most misunderstood. It is neither feared like Physics nor loved like Biology. It sits quietly in the middle - and that is precisely where most students lose the game.
Here is the truth that toppers have always known: Chemistry is the only subject in NEET where a perfect score of 180 out of 180 is realistically achievable, even for an average student. Physics demands intense calculation. Biology demands vast memorisation. Chemistry demands something more elegant - structured thinking and disciplined revision.
The syllabus is divided into three distinct engines.
Physical Chemistry is the numerical powerhouse - Thermodynamics, Equilibrium, Chemical Kinetics, and Electrochemistry form its core. The student who practices these consistently and understands the underlying logic rarely loses marks here.
Inorganic Chemistry, on the other hand, is almost entirely NCERT driven. Coordination Compounds, Chemical Bonding, the p-Block and d-Block Elements -these chapters reward those who read line by line, highlight exceptions, and revise relentlessly.
Organic Chemistry is the most dynamic of the three. General Organic Chemistry, Hydrocarbons, Aldehydes and Ketones, Biomolecules, and Polymers -these topics test not just memory but the ability to connect reaction mechanisms logically.
The single biggest mistake students make is treating all three as one homogeneous subject and studying them with the same approach. Physical Chemistry needs practice every single day. Inorganic needs revision cycles every week. Organic needs a strong conceptual foundation before any question practice begins.
The NCERT textbook is not a reference - it is the examination paper in disguise. Students who read it casually will score casually. Those who read it forensically, underlining every definition, every exception, every example, will find that the actual NEET paper feels almost familiar.
Chemistry does not reward the hardest worker. It rewards the most organised one.
Disclaimer: The views and strategies shared here are the author's personal opinions and may not align with every student's experience. Readers are encouraged to use their own judgement.