/ 50

Enter a study score between 0 and 50.

Estimated scaled study score
0.0
Scales up vs other subjects

Estimate from VTAC's 2025 scaled study scores for Economics. Scaled study scores run from 0 to about 50 and can exceed 50 in the strongest-scaling subjects. Your official figure is set by VTAC and released with your ATAR in December.

Quick answers

How is VCE Economics scaled?

VTAC scales your Economics study score. It compares how the Economics cohort performs across all their other subjects. A stronger cohort scales up; a broader one scales down. In 2025, a study score of 30 in Economics became a scaled study score of about 31, so it scales up.

Does Economics scale up or down?

Relative to other subjects, Economics scales up. A middle study score of 30 scaled to about 31 (+1), and a 40 scaled to about 42. Scaling reflects the cohort's strength, not how hard the subject is.

What's a good Economics study score?

A study score is a rank out of 50 with the state mean at 30. Around 30 is the middle; 40 puts you in roughly the top 9% of the Economics cohort; 45 is about the top 2%. The 2025 average scaled study score in Economics was about 31.

What does a study score of 40 scale to in Economics?

In 2025, a study score of 40 in Economics scaled to a VTAC scaled study score of about 42 (+2 from your study score). Use the calculator above for any study score from 0 to 50.

Reference

VCE Economics scaling table (2025 data)

VTAC's official scaled study scores for Economics in 2025, with the change from your raw study score. Scaled scores are rounded to the nearest whole number here.

Study scoreScaled study scoreChange
20200
2526+1
3031+1
3537+2
4042+2
4546+1
50500

Source: VTAC — 2025 Scaling Report (11 December 2025). Updated February 2026.

How it works

From study score to scaled study score

STEP 1

Enter your study score

Type your raw or predicted Economics study score, 0 to 50. Predicted is fine before results day.

STEP 2

VTAC scaling applied

Your study score is mapped onto VTAC's 2025 scaling curve for Economics. It is built from the official scaled scores.

STEP 3

See your scaled score

Get your estimated scaled study score. See how much Economics scales up or down. And get your percentile in the cohort.

About this VCE Economics scaling calculator

This tool estimates the VTAC scaled study score you'd receive in VCE Economics from your study score, using the official VTAC 2025 Scaling Report — the most recent scaling data. It uses the same source as our VIC VCE ATAR calculator. So your Economics scaled score here matches your full ATAR estimate there.

In 2025, Economics scales up: a middle study score of 30 scaled to about 31 (+1), and a study score of 40 scaled to about 42. Scaling is not a measure of how “hard” the subject is. It reflects how the Economics cohort performed across all their other VCE subjects. A strong cohort scales a subject up. This stops its students being disadvantaged for competing against each other. A broader cohort scales down. Your rank within the subject never changes — only how that rank counts towards your ATAR.

One point to be clear about. Scaling is recalculated every year. The cohort changes every year. So read this as a close estimate for planning, not a fixed value. And scaled scores can sit above 50 for the strongest-scaling subjects. To see how Economics combines with your other subjects, use the VIC VCE ATAR calculator. To compare subjects, browse all VCE scaling calculators or read our methodology.

VCE Economics scaling — common questions

I got a study score of 40 in VCE Economics — what does it scale to?

A study score of 40 in Economics scales to about 42. For comparison, a study score of 30 scales to about 31, and a 45 to about 46. These follow the latest VTAC scaling pattern and move slightly each year with the cohort.

Does VCE Economics scale up or down?

Economics scales up slightly. A study score of 30 scales to about 31 (a change of +1). It's a modest gain rather than a big one, but it's a gain — your scaled score sits a little above your study score across most of the range.

Why did my Economics study score change after scaling?

VTAC scales every subject so study scores can be compared fairly for the ATAR. The adjustment reflects how strong the Economics cohort is relative to all students. A study score of 40 in Economics, for example, becomes about 42 after scaling. It's the scaled score, not your raw study score, that goes into your ATAR aggregate.

What study score do I need in Economics for a scaled score of 40?

To reach a scaled score of about 40 in Economics, you'd need a study score of roughly 38. From there, pushing your study score higher lifts your scaled score further — up to about 50 at a study score of 50.

Is VCE Economics worth taking for a high ATAR?

Economics gives a small scaling gain, so it's a reasonable pick — but the deciding factor should be how well you'll do in it. A high study score in Economics contributes far more than a low one, regardless of the modest scaling.

What's a good study score in VCE Economics?

A study score of 30 is exactly average in every VCE subject by design. In Economics, 30 scales to about 31. A study score of 40 (around the top 9% of a subject) is strong and scales to roughly 42; 45+ is excellent. Aim as high as you realistically can — every point of study score moves your scaled score.

Can a scaled score go above 50 in Economics?

In Economics, scaled scores stay at or below 50 — a study score of 50 scales to about 50. Only the very strongest-scaling subjects (such as Specialist Maths) push scaled scores above 50; most subjects, including Economics, top out at around 50.

How is VCE Economics scaled for the ATAR?

VTAC takes your Economics study score and scales it. This makes it compare fairly with every other subject. It is based on how academically strong the Economics cohort is. The stronger the field, the more the subject scales up. Your scaled scores — your best four plus increments — form the aggregate behind your ATAR.