
With NEET UG 2026 scheduled for 3 May 2026, the exam is now very close, and the official city intimation slip has already been released. That means this is no longer the phase for grand plans, long lecture playlists, or trying to “complete everything.” It is now a survival and conversion phase. NEET 2026 remains a 180-question, 720-mark exam in offline mode, from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM, so even a modest score target like 150 marks still needs a disciplined last-15-days approach.
The first truth students must hear is this, 150 marks in 15 days is possible only if the student is not starting from absolute zero. So this blog is not about fantasy. It is about a practical last-15-days rescue plan.

Yes, for the right student, it is a realistic stabilisation target.
Let’s be honest. 150/720 is not a government MBBS target, and it is not the kind of score students dream about in the beginning of their preparation. But in the final two weeks, the question changes. It becomes:
In that sense, 150 is a rescue target. It is a score that says:
you are trying to recover something meaningful from the time left, not waste the last 15 days in panic.
A student should not think of 150 as one big number. It becomes much easier when split.
A practical 150-mark path can look like this:
Or:
This is why the smartest last-15-days plan should not be “equal attention to all subjects.” NEET gives Biology the biggest share of the paper, and that is exactly where last-minute marks usually come fastest through NCERT-based revision and direct-question practice. The official pattern makes that clear, Biology alone contributes 90 questions and 360 marks, while Physics and Chemistry contribute 45 questions and 180 marks each.
Many students begin with the hardest chapter first.
Others keep switching between resources without staying consistent.
Hours go into watching explanations that feel productive but add little retention.
In the end, trying to complete everything often leaves them remembering almost nothing.
VVT’s own 40-day and 2-month revision guides push the exact opposite approach, start with medium and strong chapters, split every chapter into revision plus MCQ practice plus testing, and treat the final phase as score-building, not perfect syllabus completion.
That principle becomes even more important when only 15 days are left.
If time is very short, chapter priority must follow this order:
If the target is 150 in 15 days, Biology must become your score base.
Not because it is “easy,” but because it responds the fastest to:
A good last-15-days Biology strategy is:
Do this every day, and Biology can become the subject that protects your score from collapsing.

Also read: How to Fill the NEET 2026 OMR Sheet: Step-by-Step Guide for Students
Also read : Common Exam Hall Mistakes Students Should Avoid for NEET 2026
Chemistry is the second-best rescue subject in a 15-day plan because some parts of it revise quickly if the student has seen them before.
Use this split:
Do not now try to master every difficult Physical Chemistry chapter from zero. In 15 days, Chemistry should be treated as a return-on-time subject, not as a full-syllabus subject.
Physics is where many students destroy their 15-day plan.
They panic, open the heaviest mechanics chapters, and spend half a day solving three questions.
That is not smart rescue prep.
In a 150-mark plan, Physics should be kept selective:
The goal is not to become strong in Physics now.
The goal is to collect safe marks without letting Physics consume your whole day.
the final phase should not be wasted on random, time-heavy coverage, especially when the student is still trying to stabilise basic score output.
The best last-15-days plan is not 15 different “motivational” days. It should be divided into 3 practical blocks.
This is where you touch only the most useful areas:
The purpose here is not high mock scores.
It is to restart answerability.
Now revision must turn into questions.
Every day should include:
This is where you stop feeling like you are “studying” and start seeing what is actually turning into marks.
The final 5 days should not be spent only on reading.
Now you need:
A practical daily structure could look like this:
Start the day with Biology, because the brain is fresher and Biology gives faster visible return. Use mid-morning for Chemistry revision and short recall. Keep Physics limited to one controlled block only. In the evening, solve mixed MCQs or a timed mini-test. At night, revise only your mistakes list, not the whole world again.
The idea is simple:
do not let the day become random.
This part is just as important.
Do not:
The last phase must be about targeted revision, score-building, and error correction, not emotional overwork.
In NEET, students do not stay stuck at a low score only because they “do not know enough.” Many students remain below 150 because their preparation is scattered, their revision is weak, and the same mistakes repeat again and again in mocks. Many students put in long hours but still do not know which chapters are actually producing marks. Others lose confidence after one bad test, while some spend too much time on difficult topics and neglect easier scoring areas.
That is why at VVT Coaching Chennai, the last phase of preparation is not treated as a random revision period. We help students use short time windows more intelligently so that even the final 15 days can still produce meaningful score improvement.
Many students who are stuck at a low score are not weak everywhere. They usually lose marks in the same pattern again and again:
Instead of giving only more random papers, VVT uses Error Exams built around the student’s own recent mistakes.
These include:
Result: even in a short 15-day period, students stop leaking the same marks and begin converting partial preparation into real score improvement.
One of the biggest problems in low-score situations is that students only see the final number. They know they scored 90, 110, or 125, but they do not know where the next 20–40 marks can realistically come from.
That is why VVT’s AI-powered mock tests do more than give a score. They help students understand:
Result: students get a much clearer picture of how to push their current score upward instead of revising blindly.
A student trying to reach 150 in 15 days does not need generic motivation. They need a realistic plan. For some students, the priority is Biology-led recovery. Others need Chemistry stabilisation, while many simply need to control Physics instead of trying to master everything.
That is where personalised mentoring at VVT helps.
Our mentors guide students on:
Result: students stop preparing emotionally and start preparing with direction.
Many students stay below 150 not because the whole syllabus is weak, but because of a few unfinished leak points:
VVT’s Remedy Classes are designed to solve these exact issues quickly and clearly, without forcing students to re-study the whole syllabus.
These sessions are:
Result: students reduce hidden weaknesses and make better use of the very limited time left.
The biggest score problems in the final 15 days are usually not dramatic. They are small, repeated issues that keep students stuck:
At VVT Coaching Chennai, the goal is simple, not just to help students “study harder,” but to help them recover marks faster, revise smarter, and use the final days in the most practical way possible.

VVT has three spots across Chennai, each easy to reach and full of support. No matter where you live, one is close by. Our campuses mix bright classrooms, helpful teachers, and a warm feel to keep you going. Here’s a quick look at each, with a focus on how they help with NEET and staying options.
Right on busy L.B. Road next to Adyar Ananda Bhavan, this spot is super convenient. Step inside, and you’ll see big, airy rooms where learning feels fun. Staff greet you with smiles, and the energy pushes you to turn weak areas like tough Physics problems into strengths.We also offer hostel facilities here for boys, with clean rooms, meals, and support to make your stay comfortable and focused. No distractions, just a safe place to rest and review after classes.
Adyar Campus (VVT Coaching Centre): “Nibav Buildings”, 4th & 5th Floor, No.23, Old No.11, L.B. Road, Adyar, Chennai – 600020. (Next to Adyar Ananda Bhavan)
Get Directions: Open in google maps!
In Shanthi Colony, Anna Nagar, this campus feels like an extension of home. Good bus links make it simple for city kids. There is no on-site hostel, but nearby options are plentiful for those who need them.
Anna Nagar Campus (VVT Coaching Centre): No.1621, 9th Main Road, Shanthi Colony, Block AI, Anna Nagar, Chennai – 600040.
Get Directions: Open in google maps!
This is our special girls-only residential campus in a quiet area. It’s built as a true home away from home, with clean dorms, healthy meals in the canteen, and round-the-clock help.
We offer full hostel facilities here, clean rooms, study areas, and a community of girls supporting each other. It’s perfect if you’re from outside Chennai or just want a focused, safe space.
Pallikaranai (Saraswathi Girls Residential Campus): Plot No. 395 & 396, 1st Main Road, Kamakoti Nagar, Pallikaranai, Chennai – 600100.
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If you are asking how to score 150 in NEET in 15 days, the most honest answer is this:
Yes, it is possible — if you have already seen the syllabus once and if these 15 days are used for:
Do not treat this as a dream-rank plan.
Treat it as a disciplined rescue plan.
And if you follow it properly, 15 days can still save much more than students think.
Visit: vvtcoaching.com
Call: +91 81221 22333
Scholarships: Up to 100% via VVTSAT!
Also read: How VVT Coaching Uses AI to Identify and Solve Your NEET Preparation Struggles!
Also read: Why Students Lose Easy Marks in NEET (And How to Stop It)!
Can I really score 150 in NEET in 15 days?
Yes, it is realistic if you have already studied the syllabus once and now focus on structured revision, NCERT, mocks, and daily mistake analysis.
Which subject should I focus on the most?
Biology should usually be the main score base because NEET gives it 90 questions and 360 marks, the highest share in the paper.
What is the biggest mistake in a 15-day rescue plan?
Trying to complete everything from scratch. VVT’s public final-phase articles clearly warn against this and instead recommend revising known chapters, solving MCQs, and correcting repeated errors.
Should I take mock tests in the last 15 days before NEET?
Yes, but only if you analyse them properly. Mock tests are useful in the final 15 days when they are followed by mistake analysis, weak-topic correction, and re-testing.