NEET Coaching Fees in Jaipur 2026: What You Actually Pay

NEET coaching fees in Jaipur span a wide band. The cheapest real programme starts near ₹60,000 per year. The most premium classroom programme at a national brand touches ₹2,80,000 per year. That is a 4.5x spread, and the spread is not random. It reflects batch size, faculty seniority, subject scope, brand overhead, and material depth. This guide unpacks the numbers so a parent can compare like with like instead of being surprised at invoice time.
The numbers in this piece come from four sources: published fee schedules from Allen, Aakash, and Resonance as of Q1 2026, direct enquiry calls we made in March 2026, ProNEET's own fee structure, and parent conversations across 30+ families comparing offers this admission cycle.
What does a NEET coaching fee actually pay for in 2026?
Before comparing numbers, name what you are buying. The fee covers six things, and different institutes weight them differently.
- Teaching hours — typically 20-26 hours per week across all subjects in a two-year NEET programme.
- Faculty access — the quality of who teaches and how accessible they are for doubts outside class.
- Study material — institute-produced chapter books, DPPs (daily practice problems), revision sheets.
- In-house test series — weekly or biweekly tests on the current chapters, with rank feedback.
- Parent-update infrastructure — apps, phone calls, PTM sessions, test-result portals.
- Classroom overhead — AC, AV equipment, location, hostel referrals, admin support.
A brand premium is mostly overhead and marketing, not teaching hours. A small-batch premium is mostly faculty access and batch-cap discipline. A cheap programme usually cuts faculty seniority first, classroom overhead second. Knowing where the money goes helps decide whether a fee is fair for your child's specific needs.
What are Allen Jaipur's NEET fees in 2026?
Allen Jaipur's Class 11+12 two-year NEET Enthuse and Leader programmes price out in the ₹1,80,000- 2,80,000 per year band. Exact number depends on which course tier (foundation, core, Enthuse, Leader), the admission cycle timing (early-bird rates apply till around March), and the scholarship discount earned on the ASAT test.
Dropper batches at Allen Jaipur run higher, typically ₹2,20,000-3,10,000 for the one-year intensive. You are paying for a denser schedule in half the time.
What is included: all four subjects (Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology), in-house material, full test series integrated with the Kota flagship, parent-portal access, AIATS integration. What is not included: reference books beyond the in-house set, external national test series if you want a second one, and hostel if the student is not local. Assume ₹25,000-40,000 in add-ons across two years.
What are Aakash Mansarovar's fees, and how do they differ from Allen?
Aakash Mansarovar and Aakash Vaishali Nagar both price their flagship Medical Plus two-year programme in the ₹1,70,000-2,20,000 per year range in 2026. That is typically 5-15 percent below Allen Jaipur for a similar product. Aakash's scholarship test (ACST) offers discounts comparable to ASAT.
The honest difference between Allen and Aakash in Jaipur is not the fee; it is the operating culture. Allen is a Kota-first brand with a Jaipur satellite. Aakash is a Delhi-first brand with a stronger Aakash Jaipur operation than most branches. Both teach NEET well. Aakash tends to run smaller batches than Allen in Jaipur, which affects daily class experience more than the 15 percent fee difference.
Jaipur 2026 pricing
NEET coaching fees across Jaipur, tier by tier
| Tier | Representative options | Typical batch size | Annual fee range |
|---|---|---|---|
| National mega-brand classroom | Allen Jaipur, Aakash (Mansarovar/Vaishali) | 150-400 | ₹1.8 - 2.8 L |
| National brand, smaller format | Resonance, PW Vidyapeeth Jaipur | 80-200 | ₹1.4 - 2.1 L |
| Mid-tier local institute | Career Point, Matrix, Utkarsh | 60-150 | ₹90 K - 1.6 L |
| Small-batch specialist (2-3 subjects) | ProNEET (Physics + Chemistry) | 30 | ₹60 K - 1.2 L |
| Standalone 1:1 or micro-group tuition | Private senior teachers, referral-only | 1-6 | ₹1.4 - 2.8 L (hourly) |
| Online programmes, same national brand | Allen Digital, Aakash Live, PW Online | Recorded + live | ₹50 K - 1.3 L |
| Dropper intensive (one year) | Allen/Aakash Dropper | 120-300 | ₹2.2 - 3.1 L |
Ranges reflect Q1 2026 Jaipur market observation, published institute fee schedules and direct enquiries in March 2026. Confirm current numbers at admissions.
What are the hidden costs most parents discover after enrolment?
Six line items that cost families more than they expected, every single admission cycle.
One: registration or caution deposit.Ranges from ₹5,000 at small institutes to ₹25,000 at national brands. Sometimes refundable at programme end, often not. Ask at the quote stage.
Two: reference books beyond the in-house material. Most students buy HC Verma volumes 1 and 2, at least one MTG Biology and Chemistry book, and the NCERT exemplar series. A full set across Class 11 and 12 is ₹8,000-15,000. Worth every rupee for a serious student.
Three: external test series. AIATS, AIIMS-pattern series from Resonance or PW, or MTG online series run ₹8,000-20,000. Optional but often recommended in the last six months before NEET.
Four: scholarship-test fee. Small (₹500-2,000) but comes up during applications. Worth paying because a good score is worth a substantial fee discount.
Five: batch or centre switch. If during Class 12 you want to move from a large batch to a smaller one, or from one centre to another, some institutes charge a switch fee or require the programme to be re-joined at new-year pricing. Ask upfront.
Six: "separate" weekend or crash programmes in Class 12. Some institutes up-sell additional revision bootcamps at ₹15,000-40,000 in the last four months of Class 12. These are optional; not joining them does not affect your main coaching. Push back if they are presented as compulsory.
Sum across two years, a family at a mega-brand often spends ₹25,000-60,000 beyond the advertised fee, spread across these six line items. Build it into your budget from day one.
Why is ProNEET priced lower than Allen and Aakash?
Two honest reasons, said directly.
One: scope.We teach Physics and Chemistry only. The standard NEET programme covers four subjects. When you halve the subject scope, you roughly halve the classroom hours and the faculty cost. Our full-year Physics + Chemistry programme at ₹60,000-1,20,000 is a smaller product than Allen's four-subject Enthuse at ₹1,80,000. Less subject coverage, proportionally less fee. Nothing mysterious.
Two: overhead.Allen Jaipur runs a large operation. Multiple campuses, hundreds of teachers, national brand-building, print and digital advertising. Every student's fee carries a share of that overhead, which is how a premium institute funds itself. We run one classroom, two senior teachers, one admissions line. Different cost base, different price point. Both models are legitimate; we are just telling you where your money goes.
What ProNEET is not: a cheaper version of Allen with the same product. Different product, different audience, different fee. If you want four subjects under one roof, a national-brand CV line, and the full mega-brand experience, Allen or Aakash is the right price for that experience. If you want the founder teaching Physics himself in a 30-seat batch for two specific subjects, our fee is the right price for that product.

The question is never what is the cheapest coaching. The question is what is the right fee for the specific product your child actually needs. A ₹2 lakh mega-brand seat that your child cannot thrive in is more expensive than a ₹90,000 small-batch seat that fits them. Total cost is outcome, not the invoice.
When is a higher fee worth paying?
Three scenarios where a ₹2-2.8 L mega-brand fee is genuinely the right call.
One: top-quartile student chasing top-100 NEET or AIIMS. The depth of peer competition and test series at Allen or Aakash is structurally larger than at a small-batch institute. If your child is already scoring above 620 on mock NEETs by Class 11 end, competing against 400 other strong students weekly is worth the fee premium.
Two: family wants all four subjects and integrated material under one roof. Logistics matter in a two-year programme. Driving your child between three institutes for three subjects is a hidden daily cost that larger one-roof brands avoid.
Three: dropper student who needs brand discipline. Some droppers specifically benefit from the structured rigour of a large institute running a dense dropper batch. The ₹2.5 L Dropper fee often has higher ROI than a smaller programme for this specific profile.
When is a smaller fee at a small-batch institute the better decision?
Three scenarios where paying ₹90,000-1,20,000 at a small-batch setup beats a ₹2,00,000 mega-brand seat.
One: Physics or Chemistry is the specific weak link. If your child is strong at Biology and Maths independently but weak at Physics, paying ₹2 L for a four-subject programme to address a Physics-only problem is inefficient. A Physics-focused small-batch setup solves the right problem at the right cost.
Two: family budget is below ₹1.8 L per year and stretching would create stress. Two years of coaching at your ceiling plus mandatory supplements is worse than two years at a comfortable fee point. The last four months of Class 12 require flexibility (books, extra tests, possibly a revision bootcamp). Leaving ₹50,000-80,000 of headroom is a strategic choice, not a compromise.
Three: student gets lost in a 300-seater. If Class 10 ended with your child in the back row of a big classroom without being seen, paying more for a bigger classroom will not fix the pattern. A 30-seat room at a smaller institute is structurally different and usually the cheaper-and- better answer.
How should a parent actually compare quotes from different institutes?
A one-page template that we give every family that asks. Put the three or four institutes you are seriously considering across columns. Across rows:
- Annual fee, written, all-in. No ambiguity. If the counsellor cannot give you one number on paper, that is a red flag.
- Subjects included. Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Maths, English. Sometimes the lower fee is covering fewer subjects.
- Batch size cap, committed in writing.A "small batch" verbal assurance means nothing. Ask for the written number.
- Core faculty names.Not "our senior panel." Specific teacher names for each subject, and confirmation they will continue to Class 12.
- Material and test series included.In-house material, in-house tests, external tests (AIATS, etc.) — which are included, which cost extra.
- Hidden costs. Registration, books, switches, scholarship test. Force the line items to be named.
- Refund policy. Month-by-month breakdown of what is refundable and when. Read before signing.
- Two-year total. Fee x 2 plus expected hidden costs. This is the number to compare across institutes, not the annual quote.
Most families are surprised by how often the cheapest- looking quote ends up in the middle of the pack once the two-year total is written out, and how often a mid-price small-batch setup is genuinely the lowest total cost.
Can we see ProNEET's exact fee structure before enrolling?
Yes. We do not publish a single number because the fee depends on subjects (Physics only, Chemistry only, or both), programme length (Class 11 entry, Class 12 entry, dropper), and instalment vs upfront. Call our admissions line and we will send the exact written quote for your child's specific case, all-in, on one page. Call +91 92143 14348 for the written fee sheet. No sales pressure; if we are not a fit, the sheet will help you compare better with whoever is.