Enter your ATAR. Then tick any bonus points. The total is usually capped near 10 points. Your rank can’t go above 99.95. Each university sets its own schemes, so confirm with them.

Your selection rank is what universities use to rank you. It is your ATAR plus any bonus points you qualify for. Selection rank = ATAR + bonus points. It is capped at 99.95.

This matters because course cut-offs are selection ranks, not raw ATARs. Say a course cut-off is 90. Your ATAR is 87, but you qualify for 3 bonus points. Your selection rank is then 90. So you can meet the cut-off. Bonus points come from subject, regional, equity, athlete and recommendation schemes. Most universities cap the total near 10 points. Schemes vary, so treat this as an estimate.

Where bonus points come from

Bonus points are called adjustment factors. They are extra points added to your ATAR for things outside a normal exam. Each university runs its own scheme, so the rules differ by course and campus.

Common types include subject bonuses for studying a related subject, like maths for an engineering degree. Equity schemes such as Educational Access (EAS) help students who faced hardship. Regional and rural schemes add points based on your home postcode. Some schools also run recommendation schemes. Most students gain about 5 to 10 points in total, and each scheme has its own cap.

To estimate the parts, use our bonus points calculator or, if you live outside a city, the regional bonus calculator. To check the ATAR you start from, try the ATAR predictor. For the official equity scheme and its rules, see the UAC adjustment factors page.

FAQ

Common questions

What is a selection rank?

It is the rank universities use to choose students. It is your ATAR plus any bonus points. Universities compare your selection rank to the course cut-off. It is capped at 99.95.

Is selection rank the same as ATAR?

Not quite. Your ATAR is your rank against other Year 12 students. Your selection rank is your ATAR plus bonus points. So your selection rank is usually higher.

How is selection rank calculated?

Start with your ATAR. Then add any bonus points you qualify for. The formula is: selection rank = ATAR + bonus points. The total is capped at 99.95.

How do I increase my selection rank?

You can earn bonus points. Examples are subject, regional and equity schemes. Athlete and school recommendation schemes also count. Each adds points to your ATAR, up to the cap.

Does a course cut-off refer to ATAR or selection rank?

Almost always the selection rank. Cut-offs are quoted as selection ranks, not raw ATARs. So bonus points can help you meet a cut-off. Check how each university quotes its cut-offs.

Can my selection rank be lower than my ATAR?

No. Bonus points are only ever added, never taken away. So your selection rank is at least your ATAR. It can be higher, but never lower.

How many bonus points can I get?

Most students gain about 5 to 10 points in total. Each scheme has its own cap, and some single schemes cap at 2 to 5 points. Your selection rank still cannot pass 99.95.

Do all universities use selection rank?

Yes, in practice. Almost every Australian university selects on your rank after adjustments, not your raw ATAR. The points each one offers, though, can differ a lot.

How do I find my selection rank before I apply?

Add your likely adjustment factors to your ATAR estimate. Use the bonus points calculator for the parts. The exact figure comes from each university after you apply through your state admissions centre.