What's a good QCE score?

Every QCE student wants to know what counts as a good result. The honest answer depends on the subject and your goal. Here is what the numbers actually mean.

For the QCE, a strong subject result is one that ranks you well within your subject, and strong results in well-scaling subjects matter most. Because scaling differs by subject, the same raw result can contribute very differently to your ATAR. For a 90+ ATAR, you generally need strong, well-scaling results across your best five subjects.

Key takeaways

  • A strong result is one that ranks you well within your subject.
  • Strong results in well-scaling subjects matter most.
  • The same raw result can contribute very differently to your ATAR.
  • For a 90+ ATAR, you need strong results across your best five.
  • A high result in a low-scaling subject still counts — ranking well matters.
  • Your best five scaled results are what build your ATAR.

How QCE subject results work

In the QCE, each General subject gives you a result built from internal assessment and an external exam. That result reflects how you performed against the subject’s standards.

QTAC then scales your results so subjects can be compared, and takes your best five to build your ATAR. So your subject result is the starting point, and scaling shapes how much it counts.

What counts as a good QCE result?

A good result is one that places you near the top of your subject. The higher you rank within a subject, the stronger your scaled result, and the more it helps your ATAR.

But “good” is not the same in every subject, because of scaling. A result that is strong in one subject may contribute more or less to your ATAR than the same result in another.

Why scaling changes the answer

Scaling adjusts each subject so results can be compared fairly. A subject with a strong cohort scales up; a broad one scales down. So a strong result in a high-scaling subject can be worth more towards your ATAR than the same result in a broad-entry one.

This is why there is no single “good QCE result”. What matters is your scaled result, which depends on both your raw result and how the subject scales. See QCE scaling explained.

What QCE result do you need for a 90+ ATAR?

A 90+ ATAR means finishing in the top 10% of your age group. To get there, you generally need strong results across your best five subjects, especially ones that scale reasonably well.

There is no single result that guarantees it, because your ATAR depends on your best five combined and on how everyone else did. Consistent strength across subjects matters more than topping any single one.

What is the average QCE result?

By design, results in each subject spread across the range, with most students in the middle. A result near the top of a subject already puts you well above the middle.

Remember that a solid subject result and a high ATAR are related but not identical. The ATAR is a rank built from scaled results, so where your result sits in the subject is only part of the story.

Is a high result in a low-scaling subject still good?

Yes. Scaling lowers a whole subject, but your position within it still counts. A high result in a lower-scaling subject means you ranked near the top of that subject, which still produces a solid scaled result.

So do not dismiss a subject just because it scales modestly. A strong result in it can contribute more than a weak result in a high-scaling subject you struggled with.

It is about your best five

Your ATAR uses your best five scaled results. So a “good” set of results is really five strong, well-scaling results, not one standout.

This is why consistency matters. Five solid results usually beat two excellent ones and three weak ones. Spreading your effort across your best subjects builds a stronger aggregate.

Match your results to your goal

The most useful way to think about “good” is to work backwards from your goal. Find the course you want, look up its ATAR cutoff, and aim for the results that get you there.

That turns a vague target into a clear one. A course needing an 85 ATAR asks for a different set of results than one needing 95. See what a good ATAR is nationally.

Estimate your ATAR

Results are easier to judge once you see the ATAR they produce. Our QCE ATAR calculator applies scaling to your results and shows your estimated ATAR.

Try a few subjects and results to see how scaling shapes the outcome. It makes “good” concrete, tied to the rank you are aiming for.

Good results by subject type

What counts as a strong result can feel different across subject types. In heavily scaled subjects like Specialist Maths or Chemistry, even a solid result can be very valuable once scaled. In broad-entry subjects, you generally need to rank near the top to get a strong scaled result.

So do not judge a result in isolation. A good result in a strong-scaling subject and a very high result in a broad one can contribute similarly to your ATAR.

What matters is the scaled result, which blends your raw result with how the subject scales.

A good result versus a high ATAR

A strong subject result and a high ATAR are related but not the same. A subject result describes how you did in one subject. A high ATAR is a strong rank across your best five combined.

You can collect several strong results and still land an ATAR below what you hoped, if the rest of your results or the scaling do not line up. So chase strong results across all your subjects, not just one showcase.

Consistency across your best five is what lifts your ATAR, more than a single standout result.

Setting a realistic target

The most useful way to aim is to work backwards from your course. Find its ATAR cutoff, then use a calculator to see roughly what results reach it. That turns a vague “do well” into concrete targets for each subject.

Aim a little above the cutoff to give yourself a buffer, since cutoffs move year to year. A clear, realistic target for each subject is far more motivating than a fuzzy hope for a high ATAR.

A good QCE result is personal

In the end, a “good” result is the one that gets you where you want to go. A set of results that clears your chosen course is a better outcome for you than higher results aimed at nothing in particular.

So define good by your own goal, not by comparison with friends. Find the results your course needs, and make those your measure. That is better for your planning and much better for your wellbeing.

It comes down to your best five

Whatever the subject, remember the ATAR uses your best five scaled results. So a good set of results is five strong, well-scaling results, not one showcase. Five solid results usually beat two excellent ones and three weak ones.

Spread your effort across your best subjects, keep English solid for eligibility, and take a spare subject as insurance. That is how a good ATAR is built.

Common questions

What is a good QCE score?

A good QCE result is one that ranks you well within your subject, and strong results in well-scaling subjects matter most. Because scaling differs by subject, the same raw result can contribute differently to your ATAR.

What QCE result do I need for a 90+ ATAR?

A 90+ ATAR usually needs strong results across your best five subjects, especially well-scaling ones. There is no single guaranteed result, because your ATAR combines your best five and depends on how everyone else did.

What is the average QCE score?

Results in each subject spread across the range, with most students in the middle. A result near the top of a subject already sits well above the middle.

Is a high mark in a low-scaling subject still good?

Yes. Scaling lowers a whole subject, but your rank within it still counts. A high result means you ranked near the top, which still produces a solid scaled result towards your ATAR.