he NEET UG 2026 paper leak investigation has now widened beyond paper setters, subject experts, middlemen and coaching links. The Central Bureau of Investigation is reportedly questioning parents who allegedly paid large amounts of money to obtain leaked question papers for their children.
This development has made the case even more serious because the investigation is no longer limited to those who leaked or circulated the paper. It is now also focusing on the alleged beneficiaries and families who may have knowingly used the leaked material.
Parents Under CBI Scanner
According to reports, CBI teams conducted searches in Nanded and Latur after receiving inputs that some families had allegedly procured leaked NEET UG 2026 papers for their children.
In one case, the parents of a girl who appeared for NEET UG on May 3 were questioned for several hours. Investigators also examined electronic devices, documents, phone records and messages exchanged by family members.
Officials suspect that some families may have paid between ₹5 lakh and ₹25 lakh to middlemen for access to leaked question papers before the examination.
Alleged Payment of ₹10 Lakh
In the Nanded case, investigators reportedly suspect that the student’s father, a businessman, paid around ₹10 lakh. According to the investigation, ₹5 lakh may have been paid to one middleman and another ₹5 lakh to a separate individual.
CBI is now checking whether this payment was linked to the alleged leaked question paper network.
The agency is also looking into the student’s connection with a coaching institute in Pune, where she reportedly stayed for around 15 days for preparation.
Coaching Links Also Being Examined
As part of the wider probe, investigators are also examining coaching-related links. A private coaching institute had reportedly displayed banners featuring some students under a result-related campaign.
Officials are now checking whether any expected performance claims, coaching links or student movements were connected to the alleged leak network.
The coaching institute has reportedly denied knowledge of the CBI action.
Money Trail Becomes Central Focus
The investigation is now strongly focused on the money trail. Officials suspect that the leak network may have operated through a structured system involving:
- paper setters or insiders,
- middlemen,
- student recruiters,
- coaching-related contacts,
- parents willing to pay,
- and candidates who received leaked material.
Investigators are also probing whether some parents who bought the papers later circulated them to others to recover part of the money they had paid.
Network Spread Across Multiple Districts
Reports suggest that the alleged network may have operated across Pune, Latur, Nanded and nearby districts.
CBI has already arrested several accused in connection with the NEET UG 2026 paper leak case, including alleged intermediaries and persons linked to the circulation chain.
Now the agency is trying to identify:
- who paid money,
- who received the leaked papers,
- how many candidates benefited,
- whether parents knowingly participated,
- and whether similar transactions happened in other districts.
Why This Is a Serious Development
This angle of the investigation raises a very important question: if parents knowingly paid for leaked papers, then the case is not only about exam malpractice but also about the moral collapse of the admission race.
NEET UG is meant to provide equal opportunity to lakhs of hardworking students. If wealthy families used money to access leaked papers, it directly hurts honest students who studied sincerely.
This also shows how competitive pressure, fear of failure and obsession with medical seats may have pushed some families toward illegal methods.
Impact on Honest Students
The biggest victims of such paper leak cases are genuine students. Many students prepare for years with discipline, sacrifice and pressure. When a leak happens, their hard work is questioned and the entire examination system loses credibility.
The NEET UG 2026 exam has already been cancelled, and students now have to appear again. For honest aspirants, this means:
- extra stress,
- extra preparation burden,
- emotional pressure,
- delay in admission process,
- and uncertainty about the future.
What Students and Parents Should Learn
This case is a warning for all students and parents. Medical admission should never be pursued through shortcuts, leaked papers or illegal networks.
Parents must understand that paying for leaked papers can destroy a child’s future instead of securing it. If caught, such actions may lead to criminal investigation, legal trouble, cancellation of candidature and long-term damage to reputation.
Students should focus only on legal and ethical preparation.
Conclusion
The CBI investigation into the NEET UG 2026 paper leak has entered a new phase with parents now coming under scrutiny for allegedly purchasing leaked papers for their children.
The agency is tracing the money trail, questioning families, examining devices and identifying possible beneficiaries. More raids and further action are expected as the investigation continues.
This case is a strong reminder that exam integrity is not only the responsibility of testing agencies. Students, parents, coaching centres and society must also reject shortcuts and protect the fairness of the education system.