ATAR Guides 2026

Scaling, subject selection, past cut‑offs & uni admission — fully updated for 2026
Your step‑by‑step ATAR handbook

What is the ATAR?

The Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) is a number between 0 and 99.95 that ranks students relative to their age group. It’s used by universities to select domestic undergraduate students. An ATAR of 80.00 means you are in the top 20% of your cohort. The rank is calculated from an aggregate score based on your best subjects, with adjustments for subject scaling.

How ATAR is calculated (2026 update)

Each state has its own calculation method, but the national principles are consistent. Your raw assessment marks are moderated into scaled scores. The aggregate is the sum of scaled scores from:

Scaling ensures fairness across different subjects. Subjects like Specialist Maths, Physics, and Languages traditionally scale up, while subjects with lower competition may scale down. The exact scaling factors are released after each year’s HSC/VCE etc.

Example scaling factors (indicative 2025 data for 2026 admission)

SubjectTypical scaling (scaled mark / raw 40)Trend
Specialist Mathematics52 → 92⬆️ high upward
Physics46 → 84⬆️ moderate upward
Chemistry45 → 82⬆️ upward
Economics43 → 78↗️ slight upward
English Advanced41 → 74➡️ neutral
Visual Arts38 → 68⬇️ moderate down

* Actual scaling varies by state and year. These are illustrative based on NSW HSC 2024 data.

Subject selection strategies

Choosing the right subjects can boost your ATAR. Consider these principles:

Past ATAR cut‑offs for popular courses (2025/2026)

University / CourseATAR cut‑off (indicative 2026)
UNSW Medicine (BMed)99.45+ (with UCAT)
USYD Bachelor of Laws99.50
Melbourne Uni – Biomedicine96.00
Monash – Engineering (Honours)87.00
UQ – Business Management82.00
RMIT – Design (Industrial)75.00 (portfolio)

Cut‑offs are guides only; they can shift slightly each year based on demand and available places.

5 tips to maximise your ATAR

  1. Consistency across all subjects – a balanced performance often beats one stellar subject and two weak ones.
  2. Use past papers early – familiarise yourself with exam formats and timing.
  3. Check school rankings – some schools moderate marks more favourably; know your school’s historical performance.
  4. Consider a gap year if you’re close – some universities offer guaranteed entry with slightly lower ATAR after a year’s experience.
  5. Explore adjustment factors – many institutions give bonus points for disadvantage, regionality, or subject excellence.

Frequently asked questions

What’s the lowest ATAR possible?

The minimum ATAR reported is 30.00, but some students receive a rank below 30. Universities often set a minimum of 50.00‑60.00 for most courses.

Can I improve my ATAR with a gap year?

You can’t change your past scores, but some universities allow alternative entry or accept STAT tests after a gap year.

Where can I find official 2026 scaling data?

Each state’s tertiary admissions centre (UAC, VTAC, QTAC, etc.) releases detailed scaling reports around December/January.

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