Airforce Group Y Medical Assistant Admit Card 2026: Exam on 30-31 March — City Slip is Out, Admit Card Drops 24-48 Hours Before. If you applied for Indian Air Force Group Y Medical Assistant Airmen Intake 01/2027 and your exam is literally days away — stop scrolling and read this carefully. The exam city details were released on 24 March 2026, and your admit card will follow just 24 to 48 hours before the exam date of 30-31 March 2026. That means your hall ticket could appear as late as March 29. Knowing exactly how to get it — and what to check on it the moment it downloads — is what this guide is about.

This isn’t a “what is this exam” article. You’ve already applied. You’re already preparing. What you need right now is practical information for the next 5 days.
Quick Reference — Key Dates Right Now
| Event | Date / Status |
|---|---|
| Application Closed | 01 February 2026 |
| Correction Window | 13–15 February 2026 |
| Exam City Details Released | 24 March 2026 — Available Now |
| Admit Card Release | 24–48 hours before exam |
| Exam Date | 30–31 March 2026 |
| Result | To be announced |
| Official Website | indianairforce.nic.in |
How to Check Your Exam City Details Right Now
The city slip is already live. If you haven’t checked it yet, do this immediately:
Step 1: Open indianairforce.nic.in on a laptop or desktop — the portal loads more reliably than on mobile when files need to be downloaded.
Step 2: Go to the “Agniveer Vayu / Airmen Recruitment” section on the homepage.
Step 3: Look for “Group Y / Medical Assistant Intake 01/2027 Exam City Details” — click it.
Step 4: Log in using your Registration Number or Email ID and Password. Fill in the captcha if it appears.
Step 5: Your exam city will display on screen. Download it and take a printout right now — don’t leave it for the morning of the exam.
Now — the exam city slip tells you which city your exam centre is in. It does not tell you the exact address of the centre, the hall number, or your seat number. That information comes with your actual admit card. So city slip + admit card together give you the complete picture.
Watch out: The exam city slip is NOT your admit card. Candidates have shown up to exam centres with only the city slip and been asked to produce the full admit card. These are two separate documents. You need both. If you’re travelling to another city for the exam, book your travel based on the city shown — but wait for the full admit card before you know the specific centre address.
When Will the Admit Card Actually Come?
Honestly, “24 to 48 hours before the exam” is a wide window — and for an exam on 30 March, that means the admit card could drop anywhere between 28 March evening and 29 March. For the 31 March session, it might come on 29 or 30 March.
Here’s the thing — Indian Air Force recruitment portals have historically released admit cards closer to the 24-hour mark rather than 48 hours in advance. Don’t assume it’ll come two days early and then panic when it doesn’t. Check the portal on 28 March evening. Check again on 29 March morning. Keep checking.
The portal is login-based — you need your Registration Number / Email ID and Password. If you’ve forgotten your password, reset it today — not on March 29 when the portal will be under heavy load and password reset emails take longer.
Pro Tip: Once the admit card downloads, check these details immediately — your name spelling, date of birth, photograph clarity, exam date and session (30th or 31st), exam centre city, and reporting time. If any detail is wrong, the correction window has already closed, but you should still contact IAF recruitment helpline immediately with proof. Don’t ignore a wrong detail assuming it won’t matter at the gate.
Who Is This Exam For — Eligibility Recap
There are two streams under this recruitment, and the eligibility is meaningfully different between them:
Stream 1 — Medical Assistant Trade (10+2 Based)
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Education | 10+2 with Physics, Chemistry, Biology, English — minimum 50% aggregate AND 50% in English |
| Marital Status | Unmarried only |
| Age (Born Between) | 01 January 2006 to 01 January 2010 |
Stream 2 — Medical Assistant Trade (Diploma / B.Sc Pharmacy)
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Education | 10+2 with PCB + English (50% aggregate, 50% in English) PLUS Diploma or B.Sc in Pharmacy with minimum 50% marks |
| Registration | Valid registration from State Pharmacy Council or PCI mandatory |
| Marital Status — Unmarried | Born between 01 January 2003 and 01 January 2008 |
| Marital Status — Married | Born between 01 January 2003 and 01 January 2006 |
So — married candidates can only apply under the Pharmacy stream, and their upper age limit is tighter (born on or after 01 January 2006). This is one detail that surprises many candidates reading the notification for the first time, though you’d have addressed this at the application stage.
The 50% in English specifically — not just 50% aggregate — is a hard requirement. Many science students with strong PCB marks but weaker English performance have been caught out by this condition at document verification. If your English marks in 10+2 are exactly at 50%, double-check your marksheet before the exam day to make sure the calculation holds.
Physical and Medical Standards — What the IAF Will Actually Check
This section matters because a lot of candidates prepare academically but don’t think about the physical and medical requirements until they’re standing in front of a medical officer.
Physical Fitness Test:
- 1.6 km run in 7 minutes for candidates up to 21 years
- 1.6 km run in 7 minutes 30 seconds for candidates above 21 years holding Diploma/B.Sc Pharmacy
Medical Standards:
| Parameter | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Height | Minimum 152.5 cm |
| Chest | Well proportioned, minimum 5 cm expansion range |
| Hearing | Normal — forced whisper audible from 6 metres, each ear separately |
| Weight | Proportionate to height and age per IAF standards |
| Dental | Healthy gums, minimum 14 dental points |
| Vision | 6/36 each eye, correctable to 6/9; refractive error not exceeding +3.50D including astigmatism |
Honestly, the vision standard is where a significant number of candidates get screened out — and most don’t check it carefully beforehand. If you wear spectacles, your uncorrected vision must be 6/36 in each eye and your corrected vision must reach 6/9. The refractive error limit of +3.50D is firm. Get an eye test done before the exam date if you have any doubt — discovering you’re outside this range at the medical examination is far worse than knowing in advance.
The dental requirement of 14 dental points is something most people have never thought about. It’s a scoring system based on the number and condition of functional teeth. Most healthy candidates in their late teens and early twenties meet this naturally — but if you’ve had significant dental issues, it’s worth knowing this standard exists.
Selection Process — What Happens After the Exam
The written exam on 30-31 March is just the first stage. Here’s the full sequence:
Stage 1 — Proficiency Test: This is the written examination you’re appearing for on 30-31 March. It tests subject knowledge relevant to the Medical Assistant trade — Biology, Physics, Chemistry, and English proficiency are core components based on the eligibility requirements.
Stage 2 — English Written Test: A separate English language assessment. Given that 50% in English is a hard eligibility bar, this stage tests whether your actual communication ability matches the qualification you’ve claimed.
Stage 3 — Physical Fitness Test (PFT) I & II: The 1.6 km run as detailed above, plus additional physical assessment. PFT I is typically an initial screening round; PFT II is the detailed evaluation.
Stage 4 — Adaptability Test II: This is a psychological and situational assessment that the Air Force uses to evaluate whether a candidate can adapt to Air Force service conditions. It’s not something you “prepare” for in the traditional sense — but being calm, clear-headed, and honest in your responses is the correct approach.
Stage 5 — Medical Examination: Full medical as per IAF standards.
Most candidates who appear in the written exam get eliminated at PFT — not because they’re physically weak, but because they haven’t specifically trained for the 1.6 km run within the time limit. Seven minutes for 1.6 km is roughly a 4:22 pace per kilometre. If you haven’t been running regularly, that’s tighter than it sounds. Use the days before 30 March to stay physically warm — light runs, not heavy training — so you don’t go in cold.
Original Analysis: Group Y Medical Assistant vs. Other IAF Group Y Trades — What’s Different Here
Let me tell you something that’s worth knowing before you walk into that exam hall.
The Medical Assistant trade in IAF is a specialised technical role — you’ll be working in Air Force hospitals, medical units, and potentially field medical setups. It’s not a general administrative or logistics trade. The training is medical-specific, and the career progression involves working in a healthcare support environment within the military.
For Maharashtra candidates — particularly those from cities like Pune, Nashik, Nagpur, and Mumbai — this trade is genuinely competitive because the state produces a large number of 10+2 PCB students every year. Your competition in the exam will include candidates from across India, but Maharashtra typically has strong representation in Air Force medical trade recruitment.
The Pharmacy stream candidates — those with Diploma or B.Sc Pharmacy — are competing in a slightly different pool. Given that pharmacy graduates are eligible at a higher age and that married candidates are also allowed, this stream attracts a more experienced candidate set. If you’re a pharmacy graduate and you’re in the age range, your qualification gives you a meaningful edge over pure 10+2 candidates in subject depth — use that in your exam preparation.
Documents to Carry to the Exam Centre
The notification doesn’t publish a full document checklist for exam day — but based on standard IAF Airmen exam entry requirements, carry these:
Your admit card — printed, not just on phone. Most centres don’t accept digital-only admit cards for Air Force exams. One valid photo ID — Aadhaar, passport, or driving licence. Two recent passport photographs, same as the one on your application. Your 10+2 marksheet original — some centres ask to see it at entry. If you’re in the Pharmacy stream, carry your Diploma/B.Sc certificate and State Pharmacy Council registration card.
Who Should Read This Most Carefully Right Now
If your exam is on 30 March — that’s literally 6 days away as this is being written. Your admit card isn’t out yet. Your priority today is: check exam city if you haven’t, reset your portal password if needed, pack your documents, plan your travel if your exam city isn’t your home city, and do light physical activity to stay ready for PFT.
If your exam is on 31 March, you have one extra day — but don’t use it to procrastinate on any of the above.
FAQ — What Candidates Are Actually Searching Right Now
My exam city shows a different city from where I live — can I request a change? No. Exam centre allocation is done by the Air Force based on application data and centre availability. The correction window (13–15 February) was the only opportunity to make changes to your application. Centre allocation after that is final. If your city is different from your home city, plan travel and accommodation immediately — don’t wait for the admit card to confirm the specific address before booking travel, since you already know the city.
The admit card says “24–48 hours before exam” — what time exactly should I check? The notification doesn’t give an exact time. From past Indian Air Force exam cycles, admit cards for Group Y exams have typically appeared on the portal in the evening hours — roughly 6 PM to 10 PM on the day before the exam. Check the portal on March 28 evening for the March 30 exam and March 29 evening for the March 31 exam. Set a reminder.
I forgot my registration number — how do I log in to check the city slip? Try logging in with your Email ID instead of registration number — the portal accepts both. If you’ve also forgotten the password, use the “Forgot Password” link on the portal login page immediately. Password reset emails from government portals sometimes take 30–60 minutes to arrive, and the process gets slower when server load increases near exam dates. Do this today.
What happens if I fail the written exam on 30-31 March? You won’t be called for subsequent stages — PFT, Adaptability Test, or Medical. The result will be announced after the exam, and only shortlisted candidates proceed. If you don’t qualify this intake, the next IAF Medical Assistant intake notification will open in due course — typically every 6 to 12 months. Your application from this cycle doesn’t carry forward.
Important Links
| Purpose | Link |
|---|---|
| Check Exam City Details | indianairforce.nic.in |
| Download Admit Card (When Live) | indianairforce.nic.in — Recruitment Section |
| Official Notification PDF | indianairforce.nic.in |
| Online Correction Link | Closed — 15 February 2026 |
| IAF Official Website | indianairforce.nic.in |