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EduTest · Results and interpretation

EduTest results: scaled scores, percentiles and school cut-offs

How EduTest results are scaled, what each percentile band signals, how independent Australian schools set scholarship cut-offs, and the steps to take in the weeks after a result arrives.

By Braintree Editorial, Braintree Coaching Australia editorial team

Reviewed by Braintree Academic Panel on

Last updated

Quick Answer

EduTest results are reported as standardised scaled scores with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15 in each of the five sections, then averaged into a single overall result on a scale of roughly 60 to 140. Each independent school sets its own scholarship cut-off, which varies year on year with the size and strength of the applicant pool.

  • Score scale~60–140
  • StandardisationMean 100, SD 15
  • Sections in average5 equally weighted
  • Results released4–8 weeks after sitting

Read the full EduTest Selective School & Scholarship Exam Preparation guide.

EduTest results carry weight only once you can read them — the scaled scores, the percentile bands and the school-specific cut-offs all sit behind the headline number a family receives by email. This page sets out how the test is scored, what each band of scaled scores typically signals, how independent Australian schools set their scholarship cut-offs from year to year, and the steps to take in the weeks after a result arrives. It pairs with our EduTest selective and scholarship exam hub and our EduTest exam format overview for the section-by-section detail.

How are EduTest results scored?

EduTest results are produced in four steps — raw marking, standardisation, equal weighting across sections, and a single averaged overall score. The published scoring methodology is maintained by Edutest Australia, the test publisher, and the structure is consistent across sittings so families can compare results year on year.

  1. Raw marking. Each multiple-choice section is marked on the number of correct answers, with no penalty for incorrect answers. The written-expression task is marked by trained markers against a four-criterion rubric covering ideas and content, organisation, language and vocabulary, and conventions.
  2. Standardisation. Raw scores are converted to a standardised scaled score for each section, calibrated to a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15 within the sitting cohort. Standardisation lets schools compare candidates across cohorts even when the underlying paper varies slightly year to year.
  3. Equal weighting. All five sections contribute equally to the overall score — verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, reading comprehension, mathematics and written expression. No section is double-counted, and no section can be dropped from the average.
  4. Overall result. The five scaled scores are averaged into a single EduTest result on a scale of roughly 60 to 140. The overall score, alongside the per-section scores, is the figure schools use to rank candidates for scholarship offers.

What does each band of scaled scores mean?

The table below shows the bands we use when reading a result with families. The ranges are derived from the published standardisation methodology — not from a single school's published cut-off — and the "scholarship outcome" column describes typical competitiveness at the academic-scholarship rounds run by independent Australian schools.

Overall scaled score Percentile band What the result signals Typical scholarship outcome
135–140 Top 1–2% Exceptional, consistent across all five sections. Highly competitive for full academic scholarships at the most over-subscribed independent schools.
128–134 Top 5–10% Very strong, with no weak section. Competitive for partial scholarships at tier-1 independent schools and full offers at strong second-tier schools.
120–127 Top 10–20% Strong, typically with one or two stronger sections. Competitive for partial scholarships at strong independent schools and competitive for selective entry at state schools that publish lower cut-offs.
110–119 Top 20–35% Above the cohort average; pacing or one section often limits the score. May meet cut-offs at schools with smaller scholarship rounds; usually below the threshold at oversubscribed schools.
Below 110 Below top 35% Around or below the cohort average. Unlikely to meet scholarship cut-offs in the current sitting; consider general entry, reapplying for a later year level, or alternative pathways.

These bands are guidance, not a guarantee. A child who scores 132 overall but with a written-expression score of 105 may not meet the scholarship cut-off at a school that publishes a per-section minimum on writing — and a 122 overall with no section below 115 may be more competitive than a 128 with a 100 in mathematics. Always read the per-section scores alongside the overall result.

How do independent schools set their cut-offs?

Each independent school sets its own EduTest cut-off, and the published threshold can shift year on year with the size and strength of the applicant pool. Three patterns are visible across the schools we work with:

  • Overall-score cut-offs. Most schools publish (or quietly hold) an overall scaled-score minimum — for example, 128 for the first round of scholarship offers. The minimum can move two to four points either way depending on cohort strength.
  • Per-section minima. A subset of schools require a minimum scaled score in two or three named sections (often verbal reasoning, mathematics and written expression) regardless of the overall result. These minima catch candidates who scored well on speed-rewarding sections but did not demonstrate writing or mathematics depth.
  • Combined-result weightings. A growing number of schools weight the EduTest result alongside an interview, a school report and a primary-school reference. Where this is the case, the EduTest score is necessary but not sufficient — and the documented school report can lift a borderline EduTest result over the line.

Comparable scholarship and selective-entry sittings are also run by the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER), and the NSW Department of Education publishes the placement-test scoring methodology used by NSW state selective schools. Both are useful reference points when comparing scholarship-pathway results across providers — the score scales are not interchangeable, but the standardisation principles are similar.

What does each per-section score tell us?

Per-section scores matter because they shape both scholarship outcomes and the next round of preparation. Look across all five sections, not only at the overall:

  • Verbal reasoning measures vocabulary depth, analogy and classification reasoning. A scaled score below 110 is usually a vocabulary gap, addressable in three to six months of consistent reading and word work.
  • Numerical reasoning measures pattern recognition, sequences and logical handling of numbers beyond curriculum arithmetic. A weak result here is most often a pacing issue rather than a curriculum gap.
  • Reading comprehension measures literal, inferential and critical reading across three to four passages. The most common loss is on inference questions where the student answered from memory rather than from the text.
  • Mathematics measures problem-solving across number, measurement and geometry, and statistics — without a calculator. A child consistently above 125 here typically has confidence with multi-step word problems, not only with computation.
  • Written expression is the most variable section across cohorts. A 120+ in writing nearly always reflects deliberate structure (introduction, body, conclusion) under timed conditions rather than vocabulary alone.

A balanced 125–130 across all five sections is usually a stronger scholarship application than a 135 overall driven by two strong sections and a weak third.

When are EduTest results released?

EduTest results from the 2025 sitting cycle were typically released by the receiving school four to eight weeks after the test date, in late October or early November. Schools notify families directly — Edutest Australia does not publish a centralised results portal for scholarship sittings. Timelines for a typical sitting:

Stage Timing What happens
Test sitting August–September Child sits the EduTest paper at the chosen school or test centre.
Marking and standardisation 4–6 weeks after test Edutest marks the paper, standardises scores and reports results to the school.
School notification 6–8 weeks after test School emails or posts the result, scholarship decision and any next-step instructions.
Acceptance deadline 1–2 weeks after notification Family confirms acceptance with the school; only one offer can be held.
Enrolment November–December School completes enrolment paperwork, fee schedule and orientation.

The published timeline shifts a little year on year — confirm the exact dates with the school in the application pack. The legacy timeline above reflects the 2025 round; results from earlier years follow the same shape.

What should we do after results arrive?

The right next step depends on whether a scholarship offer is in hand, but two principles apply either way: read the full results report (not only the overall), and act inside the school's published deadlines.

If a scholarship offer is received. Accept inside the deadline — most schools give one to two weeks, and a missed deadline is treated as a decline. Only one offer can be held; declining the others early is courteous and frees a place for a wait-listed family. Complete the enrolment forms, request the orientation pack, and ask the school for the section-by-section feedback Edutest provides — a strong scholarship is also useful diagnostic information for the next school year.

If no offer is received. Read the per-section scores carefully. A close overall result (within five points of the published cut-off) often reflects one weak section that is addressable in six months. Consider reapplying for a later year level — many schools rerun scholarship sittings for Year 8 and Year 9 entry. Consider general entry alongside the scholarship pathway: most of the schools we work with run a general-entry round that does not require EduTest. Above all, do not draw a single judgement from a single sitting; the test measures performance under time pressure on a particular day.

Can we appeal or request a re-mark?

Appeals and re-marks are uncommon and rarely change the outcome, but two pathways are typically available. Each school publishes its own appeal policy in the scholarship pack — confirm the deadline, which is usually one to two weeks after the result is released.

  • Clerical check. A clerical check verifies that the raw answers were transcribed and totalled correctly. This is usually free of charge and rarely identifies errors, but it is worth requesting if the per-section pattern is inconsistent with practice results.
  • Special consideration. Where a documented circumstance affected performance on the day — a sudden illness, a family emergency, a technical issue at the test centre — the school may consider an alternate sitting or a weighted result. A medical certificate or other documentation is required, and the application must usually be lodged within seven days of the test.
  • Re-marking of the writing task. Re-marks are very rarely granted on multiple-choice sections; some schools will re-mark the written-expression task for a small administration fee. Re-marks change the headline result in only a small fraction of cases.

A successful appeal almost always rests on documented evidence rather than on disagreement with the result. Frame any appeal around what the school can verify, not around the family's expectation of the score.

What does this mean for preparation?

Read EduTest results across all five sections, hold the scholarship decision against the school's published cut-off and the cohort context, and act inside the published deadlines. If a child sat the 2025 test and is now planning a 2026 retake or a later year-level scholarship round, our EduTest preparation strategies plan sets out the four-phase build-up, and our EduTest practice resources page lists the free official samples and structured materials to use. For section-by-section detail on what each component of the result measures, see the EduTest exam format overview.

At a glance

Key facts.

Score scale
~60–140 overall
Standardisation
Mean 100, SD 15 per section
Sections in average
5 equally weighted
Results released
4–8 weeks after sitting
Cohort referenced
2025 sitting cycle

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