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If you are preparing for NEET 2026 and feeling confused about whether rolling motion is part of the Physics syllabus, you are not alone. This is one of the most frequently searched doubts among NEET aspirants every year. Many students end up wasting valuable preparation time on topics that are either partially relevant or completely excluded from the NEET syllabus.
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To help you prepare smartly and avoid unnecessary confusion, this article explains whether rolling motion is included in NEET 2026. It also clarifies how rolling motion is related to NCERT Class 11 Physics. Additionally, it explains what the official NEET Physics syllabus actually expects you to study. The information given below is accurate, exam-focused, and aligned with the latest NEET exam syllabus framework. To help you prepare smartly and avoid unnecessary confusion, this article explains whether rolling motion is included in NEET 2026.
No, rolling motion is NOT included in the NEET syllabus 2026.
As per the officially prescribed NEET (UG) 2026 Physics syllabus, rolling motion has been excluded and is not required for NEET preparation.
This means:
No direct theory questions from rolling motion
No numerical problems based on rolling motion
No conceptual MCQs involving rolling without slipping
No combined translational and rotational rolling problems
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Students preparing strictly according to the NEET syllabus can safely skip the rolling motion without any risk.
Yes, rolling motion is briefly discussed in NCERT Class 11 Physics, under the chapter Motion of System of Particles and Rigid Body.
However, it is important to understand that:
NEET does not test everything written in the NCERT
Only specified and relevant portions are included in the NEET syllabus
Several NCERT subtopics are deliberately excluded from NEET
Important rule for NEET aspirants:
Presence in NCERT does not guarantee inclusion in NEET.
Earlier, rolling motion was loosely associated with rotational mechanics. Over the years, the NEET syllabus has been streamlined to reduce unnecessary complexity and focus on core medical-entrance-level physics.
Key reasons for exclusion:
NEET prioritises basic and applied physics, not advanced mechanics
Rolling motion involves combined translation + rotation, which increases difficulty
The exam now focuses more on high-yield, conceptually direct topics
Currently, NEET Physics emphasises:
Laws of Motion
Work, Energy and Power
Centre of Mass (basic level only)
Rotational Motion (limited concepts, no rolling)
Rolling motion goes beyond the required NEET difficulty level, which is why it does not appear in the syllabus.
This is a common fear among students.
The short answer: No.
NEET will not ask:
Rolling without slipping numericals
Torque-based rolling problems
Questions combining translational and rotational motion
NCERT example-based rolling questions
However, NEET can still ask basic questions from:
Moment of inertia (simple shapes)
Angular velocity (direct)
Torque (basic definition and applications)
These questions will NOT involve rolling motion.
It depends on your preparation goal:
NEET-only aspirant: Not required
JEE + NEET aspirant: Optional
Strong physics fundamentals: Can read lightly
From a NEET exam strategy point of view, rolling motion has a low return on investment and should not consume your limited preparation time.
According to the NTA-prescribed NEET Physics syllabus (based on NCERT), the following Class 11 Physics topics are included:
Kinematics
Motion of System of Particles and Rigid Body (without rolling motion)
Properties of Bulk Matter
Behaviour of Perfect Gas and Kinetic Theory
Oscillations and Waves
Rolling motion is not mentioned anywhere explicitly, confirming its exclusion.
Instead of spending time on rolling motion, focus on these high-yield NEET Physics topics:
Laws of Motion (especially friction-based numericals)
Work, Energy and Power
Centre of Mass (basic applications only)
Rotational Motion (moment of inertia, torque)
Gravitation
Current Electricity
Magnetic Effects of Current
These chapters show consistent question trends in NEET and offer better scoring potential.
According to NCERT Class 11 Physics, rolling motion refers to the motion in which a body simultaneously undergoes translational motion of its centre of mass and rotational motion about its axis, such as a wheel rolling on a surface without slipping.
In rolling without slipping:
The linear velocity of the point of contact with the ground is zero
The translational velocity of the centre of mass equals the rotational velocity contribution
Static friction plays a role
This explanation is for conceptual clarity only and not required for NEET 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
No. Rolling motion is not part of the NEET 2026 syllabus.
No. NEET strictly follows the defined syllabus, not all NCERT examples.
No. Even droppers should skip the rolling motion and revise high-scoring topics instead.
No. Rotational motion in NEET is limited and does not include rolling motion.
On Question asked by student community
Hi Gawade,
please refer to this article -
https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-ug-mock-tests
You can find the mock test link here
Government Medical Colleges in states like Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Haryana, Punjab, Gujarat, Maharashtra
Hi Arti,
Please refer to these links
Weightage:
https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-biology-chapter-wise-weightage
High-weightage chapters:
https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-2026-high-weightage-chapters
Do or Die Biology:
https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/do-or-die-chapters-in-biology-for-neet
Hindi syllabus:
https://medicine.careers360.com/hi/articles/neet-syllabus
Most Scoring Concepts eBook (free PDF):
https://medicine.careers360.com/download/ebooks/neet-most-scoring-chapters-topics-based-on-past-5-year-analysis
You still have enough time. For NEET 2026 (drop year, 3 months left), focus on:
NCERT linebyline for highweightage chapters (Human Physiology, Plant Physiology, Cell, Biomolecules, Biological Classification, Plant/Animal Kingdom, Genetics, Ecology)
Daily chapterwise MCQs + PYQs and weekly full mocks with proper analysis
Useful Careers360 links for planning:
NEET
Yes, open category students can also appear in the NEET exam. Candidates must check the detailed eligibility criteria in the NEET information brochure. Applicants from the open category have to pay the NEET form fees for Rs. 1700.
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