NSW HSC mark and band calculator
| Subject | Assessment | Exam mark | Units | HSC mark / Band | Remove |
|---|
Note: this calculator uses HSC mark = (Assessment + Exam) / 2. NESA applies statistical moderation to school assessment marks before this average, which the calculator cannot replicate without cohort data. Official marks appear on your NESA results document in mid-December.
For full subject-by-subject ATAR scaling and all 5 Australian states, use the ATAR Calculator.
NSW HSC performance bands reference (Band 1 to 6)
| Band | Mark range | Description | Typical pathway |
|---|---|---|---|
| Band 6 | 90 to 100 | Top achievement | Medicine, law, top Go8 programs |
| Band 5 | 80 to 89 | High achievement | Strong entry for most university degrees |
| Band 4 | 70 to 79 | Solid achievement | General university entry |
| Band 3 | 60 to 69 | Satisfactory | TAFE, pathway or lower-ATAR degrees |
| Band 2 | 50 to 59 | Below satisfactory | Foundation or enabling programs |
| Band 1 | 0 to 49 | Below minimum standard | Does not meet minimum HSC standard |
Extension subjects (Maths Extension 1, Maths Extension 2, English Extension 1, English Extension 2) use E4, E3, E2, E1 bands rather than the Band 1 to 6 scale. Source: NESA (NSW Education Standards Authority).
How HSC Marks Are Calculated in NSW
The NSW Higher School Certificate (HSC) is the credential awarded to Year 12 students in New South Wales by NESA (NSW Education Standards Authority). Your HSC mark in each subject sits on a 0 to 100 scale, built from two equally weighted components: the school assessment mark and the external HSC examination mark.
- School Assessment Mark: the moderated internal mark your school submits to NESA (0 to 100)
- HSC Exam Mark: your mark on the external NESA examination (0 to 100)
- Each component contributes exactly 50 percent of the final HSC mark
The formula is straightforward, but one important step happens before the average is taken: NESA applies statistical moderation to school assessment marks. Moderation ensures that a mark submitted by one school means the same thing as the same mark submitted by another. Your school's rank order for the subject is preserved (the student ranked first stays ranked first), but the mean and distribution of the school's marks are adjusted to align with how that school's cohort performed in the external exam. A raw school assessment mark of 85 may become an 87 or an 83 after moderation, depending on how strongly your school cohort performed externally.
The HSC mark calculator above uses the simplified 50:50 formula (no moderation adjustment), giving you a close planning estimate. The official HSC mark, after NESA's moderation process, appears on your results document in mid-December of your HSC year.
NSW HSC Performance Bands: Band 1 to Band 6
NESA classifies every HSC mark into one of six performance bands. The bands apply to all standard (2-unit) HSC subjects; Extension subjects use E1 to E4 bands instead. Each band is defined in NESA's published performance descriptors, which describe in detail what a student at that level knows, understands, and can do in that specific subject.
| Band | Mark range | Achievement level | Approximate cohort position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Band 6 | 90 to 100 | Top level of achievement. Thorough and sophisticated understanding. | Top 10 to 15 percent (subject-dependent) |
| Band 5 | 80 to 89 | High level of achievement. Sound and competent understanding across the course. | Top 25 to 35 percent |
| Band 4 | 70 to 79 | Solid achievement. Generally sound understanding with some gaps. | Top 50 to 60 percent |
| Band 3 | 60 to 69 | Satisfactory performance. Partial understanding of core concepts. | Top 65 to 75 percent |
| Band 2 | 50 to 59 | Below satisfactory. Limited understanding of course content. | Bottom 30 to 40 percent |
| Band 1 | 0 to 49 | Below minimum standard. Does not demonstrate the knowledge expected. | Bottom 10 to 20 percent |
The percentage of students reaching each band varies by subject and by year. More academically selective subjects (Mathematics Extension 2, Chemistry, Physics, English Advanced) tend to have higher proportions of Band 5 and Band 6 students because the self-selecting cohort is academically stronger. The HSC mark calculator above classifies each mark into the correct band using NESA's published thresholds.
School Assessment vs Examination Mark: The 50:50 Split
Both components of your HSC mark contribute exactly 50 percent to the final result. They measure different things through different processes.
School Assessment Mark: Internal Tasks
The school assessment mark is your school's estimate of your performance across the course, built from internal assessment tasks throughout the school year. These typically include in-class tests, essays, practicals, performances, projects, and a trial HSC examination. Your school submits a rank order list and a set of marks to NESA; NESA then moderates those marks against your school cohort's external exam results. The moderation preserves rank order but adjusts the mean and spread, so the top-ranked student in your school still receives the highest moderated assessment mark for that school in that subject.
HSC Exam Mark: The NESA External Examination
The external HSC exam is written and marked by NESA, not by your school. Most subjects have one written paper of 3 hours; some include multiple papers, listening components (for languages), or practical assessments (for Creative Arts). The exam mark is reported on the 0 to 100 scale and is not moderated further. It combines with the moderated school assessment mark using the 50:50 formula to produce your final HSC mark. The exam mark also acts as the moderation anchor for your school's assessment marks.
HSC Subjects and Unit Values
Every HSC course carries a unit value that determines how much it contributes to your ATAR aggregate. Understanding unit values is essential when planning which subjects count toward your best 10 units.
Two-Unit Courses
The majority of HSC subjects are 2-unit courses: English Standard, English Advanced, Mathematics Standard 2, Mathematics Advanced, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Modern History, Ancient History, Economics, Legal Studies, Business Studies, and most others. A 2-unit course contributes 2 units to your ATAR aggregate. Most students complete 5 two-unit subjects for a 10-unit total.
Extension Subjects and 1-Unit Courses
Extension subjects are 1-unit courses that build on a 2-unit subject. Maths Extension 1 extends Mathematics Advanced; Maths Extension 2 extends Extension 1. English Extension 1 and 2 extend English Advanced. Extension courses use E1 to E4 bands and have historically scaled well for ATAR purposes. A student taking Maths Extension 2 studies a total of 3 maths units (the underlying 2-unit Advanced plus both Extension courses). Some TAFE-delivered VET courses within the HSC are also 1 unit each.
The Mandatory English Requirement
All NSW HSC students must complete a minimum of 2 units of English for ATAR eligibility. English Standard (2 units) or English Advanced (2 units) are the most common choices; English EAL/D is also 2 units and satisfies the requirement for students from non-English speaking backgrounds. UAC will include English in your counting units even when your English HSC mark is lower than your other subjects. You cannot opt out of the English requirement.
From HSC Marks to ATAR in NSW
The ATAR (Australian Tertiary Admission Rank) is the figure Australian universities use to rank applicants for selective Bachelor programs. In NSW, UAC (Universities Admissions Centre) calculates the ATAR from HSC marks in three steps.
Step one: UAC applies subject scaling to each HSC mark. Raw HSC marks are scaled up or down depending on the academic strength of the cohort that studied that subject in the same year. Subjects with academically strong cohorts (Maths Extension 2, Chemistry, Physics, English Advanced) are scaled up; subjects with weaker cohorts are scaled down. The scaled mark is what feeds into the aggregate calculation, not the raw HSC mark on your NESA document.
Step two: UAC selects the best 10 units. If you studied more than 10 units, the best-10-unit combination is taken automatically. English must be in the counting 10 units. The sum of your best 10 units' scaled marks is your aggregate.
Step three: UAC converts the aggregate to a percentile rank (0.00 to 99.95) using the year's NSW-ACT eligible cohort distribution. An ATAR of 70 means you ranked in the top 30 percent; an ATAR of 90 means the top 10 percent; an ATAR of 99 means the top 1 percent.
The calculator above provides an estimated ATAR from your unscaled HSC marks using an empirical aggregate-to-ATAR curve calibrated against UAC percentile bulletins from 2018 to 2024. For the full scaled-mark ATAR calculation across all five Australian state credentials, use the dedicated ATAR Calculator. For per-subject VCE study score calculation (Victoria), see the VCE Study Score Calculator.
HSC Scaling: Which Subjects Historically Scale Up and Down
UAC publishes subject-level scaling statistics each year after results are released. Historically strong-scaling subjects in NSW include Mathematics Extension 2 (consistently one of the highest-scaling HSC subjects), Mathematics Extension 1, Chemistry, Physics, English Advanced, and English Extension 2. These subjects attract cohorts with high overall HSC performance, which drives scaling upward.
Subjects that have historically scaled lower include General Mathematics (now Mathematics Standard 2), Visual Arts, Industrial Technology, and many vocational TAFE-delivered courses. This reflects the academic profile of the cohort that chooses each subject, not a judgement on the subject's value or difficulty. The raw HSC marks entered in the calculator above are not scaled; use the ATAR Calculator for scaled aggregate estimates.
NSW HSC vs VCE: Key Differences for ATAR Calculation
Students comparing the NSW HSC to Victoria's VCE often ask how the two credentials feed into ATAR differently. Both produce an ATAR on the same 0.00 to 99.95 scale through national calibration, but the mechanics differ substantially.
| Feature | NSW HSC | Victorian VCE |
|---|---|---|
| Score scale | 0 to 100 per subject | 0 to 50 study score per subject |
| School component | 50 percent school assessment + 50 percent exam | School-assessed coursework (SACs) weighted within study score formula; weight varies by subject |
| Aggregate calculation | Best 10 units (English mandatory) | Top 4 study scores + 10 percent of each additional study score (up to 2 extras) |
| Maximum aggregate | 1,000 (raw) before UAC scaling | 210 (4 x 50 plus 10% of up to two extras at 50) |
| Results admin | UAC (Universities Admissions Centre) | VTAC (Victorian Tertiary Admissions Centre) |
| Results release | Mid December (UAC portal) | Mid December (VTAC portal, typically 12 to 14 December) |
| Extension subjects | E1 to E4 bands (1 extra unit each) | Specialist units studied alongside standard subjects; Specialist Maths is a standalone subject |
The ATAR produced by both systems is nationally comparable: an ATAR of 85 from UAC (NSW) and an ATAR of 85 from VTAC (Victoria) represent the same percentile position in the national cohort. The underlying credential mechanics are different, but the output is calibrated to a common scale. Use the ATAR Calculator to estimate your ATAR using either the HSC or VCE input format.
Understanding Your Official HSC Results
HSC results are released by NESA each December, typically on the same day UAC releases ATAR results. Your NESA results document shows each subject's HSC mark, the performance band it falls into, and an HSC Record of Achievement. The ATAR itself is a separate calculation by UAC and appears on your UAC statement, not on the NESA results document.
A student aiming for Medicine at UNSW typically needs an ATAR above 99.00 plus a competitive UCAT score. Engineering at UNSW typically requires an ATAR of 90 to 96, depending on the specific stream. Business at UTS typically comes in at 85 to 90. These are guide figures; cut-offs shift every year based on cohort performance and available places. The UAC Cut-off Report (published annually) is the most reliable source for the previous year's minimum ATARs.
If you want to check your results on the day of release, log in to your NESA account at educationstandards.nsw.edu.au and your UAC account at uac.edu.au. Both portals are accessible from mid-morning on results day. NESA also sends your results by post and email; UAC sends your ATAR by SMS if you have a mobile number registered.
This NSW HSC mark calculator estimates your HSC mark using the simplified 50:50 formula and classifies performance bands per NESA published thresholds. The estimated ATAR is derived from a curve calibrated against UAC percentile bulletins (2018 to 2024). Official HSC marks are determined by NESA after statistical moderation; official ATARs are calculated by UAC after year-specific scaling is confirmed. Treat this calculator as a planning tool, not a guarantee. Always verify with your school's HSC coordinator. Last verified: May 2025.