ATAR for Medical Science: The Degree with an Identity Crisis
Same name, completely different degrees depending on where you study. Here’s how to figure out which version you’re actually applying for โ and what ATAR you actually need.
UNSW, University of Sydney
Highly structured, competitive, essentially functioning as a provisional medicine pathway. Capped cohorts. Very high ATAR required.
Monash, UQ, ANU, UWA
Rigorous science degree focused on pathology, immunology, and research methodology. Strong but not exclusive pre-med preparation.
UTS, Macquarie, Newcastle, Griffith
Broader health science degree with a medical science label. More flexible, lower ATAR, good preparation but less competitive cohort.
If you’re looking at Bachelor of Medical Science degrees for 2026, the first thing you need to understand is that the name on the parchment tells you almost nothing about what you’re signing up for. A Bachelor of Medical Science at UNSW and a Bachelor of Medical Science at Griffith University share a title. They do not share an ATAR requirement, a cohort profile, a curriculum structure, or a set of graduate outcomes.
This confusion isn’t your fault. Universities have deliberately chosen the “medical science” label because it sounds more purposeful than “health science” and more clinical than “biomedical science.” It works as a marketing tool. But as an applicant, you need to see past the label to the actual structure of the degree โ because that structure determines what ATAR you need, what you’ll study, and where it can realistically take you.
Every Bachelor of Medical Science ATAR for 2026
This table covers every program labelled “Bachelor of Medical Science” (or very close variants) across Australia. Note the 30-point spread between the highest and lowest โ that’s wider than almost any other degree category.
| University | Degree Name | ATAR Range | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| UNSW | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~96.00โ98.00 | Pre-Med Track |
| University of Sydney | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~95.00โ97.00 | Pre-Med Track |
| Monash University | Bachelor of Medical Science (Scholarship) | ~92.00โ95.00 | Research Track |
| University of Queensland | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~88.00โ92.00 | Research Track |
| ANU | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~85.00โ90.00 | Research Track |
| UWA | Bachelor of Biomedical Science (Medical Science major) | ~82.00โ86.00 | Research Track |
| UTS | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~83.00โ87.00 | Generalist Track |
| Macquarie University | Bachelor of Medical Sciences | ~80.00โ85.00 | Generalist Track |
| University of Newcastle | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~75.00โ80.00 | Generalist Track |
| Griffith University | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~68.00โ73.00 | Generalist Track |
| Western Sydney University | Bachelor of Medical Science (Advanced) | ~85.00โ90.00 | Research Track |
| Federation University | Bachelor of Medical Science | ~65.00โ70.00 | Generalist Track |
The pattern is clear. Sydney and UNSW sit in a tier of their own โ closer to what you’ll need for the actual Doctor of Medicine than to the rest of the medical science programs on this list. UTS and Macquarie occupy a competitive-but-accessible middle ground. Griffith and Federation sit at the accessible end, where the degree functions more like a general health science program with a medical flavour.
How UNSW’s Pre-Med Pipeline Actually Works
UNSW’s Bachelor of Medical Science deserves its own section because it’s the single most misunderstood degree in Australian admissions. Thousands of students apply for it each year assuming it’s a standard science degree. It isn’t.
The UNSW BMedSci is explicitly designed as a pre-medical program. It’s not a “keep your options open” degree โ it’s a “we know you want to do medicine” degree. The curriculum is structured around the same foundational sciences that underpin the early years of the UNSW Doctor of Medicine (MD). And crucially, it offers a provisional pathway into that MD โ not a guaranteed place, but a structured route that bypasses the GAMSAT for students who meet the progression requirements.
You need an ATAR of approximately 96+ alongside Chemistry, Mathematics Advanced, and English Advanced (minimum 80 in each). This is the hardest part of the entire pathway.
Study the medical science curriculum. To remain eligible for the MD pathway, you need to maintain a minimum GPA of 5.5 out of 7.0 (roughly a Credit average, though higher is safer). This is where students who got in on a high ATAR but struggle with university-level science can fall off the pathway.
If you’ve met the GPA threshold and completed the required coursework, you can apply for the UNSW MD without sitting the GAMSAT. This is the key advantage of the BMedSci โ it removes the most unpredictable element of postgraduate medicine entry.
The UNSW MD is four years. Total time from Year 12 to practicing doctor: 7 years. This is comparable to direct-entry medicine programs at other universities โ but with a more gradual entry point.
UNSW makes this very clear in their handbook, but students regularly miss it: meeting the minimum GPA does not guarantee you a place in the MD. If more eligible BMedSci students apply for the MD than there are places available (which happens), ranking within that cohort determines who gets an offer. A GPA of 5.5 might technically qualify you, but a GPA of 6.5 makes you significantly more competitive within the BMedSci cohort.
What about the University of Sydney? Sydney’s BMedSci is similarly research-oriented and attracts a very high-achieving cohort, but it does not have the same formalised provisional MD pathway that UNSW offers. Sydney BMedSci graduates who want to do medicine at Sydney typically need to sit the GAMSAT and apply through the standard graduate entry process, competing against applicants from every other degree.
Prerequisites: The Same Wall as Pharmacy
If you’ve looked into how it compares to the pharmacy prerequisite wall, you’ll find the medical science requirements almost identical. Chemistry and Mathematics Methods are the twin pillars โ they’re non-negotiable at every reputable medical science program in the country.
Here’s the breakdown for 2026:
| University | Chemistry | Maths Methods | English | Biology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNSW | Required (min 80) | Required (min 80) | Required (min 80) | Recommended |
| University of Sydney | Required (min 80) | Required (min 80) | Required (min 80) | Recommended |
| Monash | Required (min 30 in VCE) | Required (min 25 in VCE) | Required (min 25 in VCE) | Recommended |
| UQ | Required (4, SA) | Required (4, SA) | Required (4, SA) | Assumed |
| UTS / Macquarie / Newcastle | Required | Required or Assumed | Required | Assumed |
| Griffith / Federation | Required | Recommended | Required | Recommended |
Notice the pattern: the higher the ATAR requirement, the stricter the prerequisites. UNSW and Sydney specify minimum grades in each prerequisite subject (usually 80+ in HSC terms), not just completion. Griffith and Federation require Chemistry but are more flexible on Mathematics โ which makes sense, because their cohorts are less mathematically intensive.
Know that medical science and engineering share the Maths Methods requirement but diverge on everything else. If you drop Physics but keep Chemistry and Methods, you’re still on track for medical science but you’ve closed off engineering. If you’re deciding between the two in Year 11, Physics is the swing subject โ keep it if you’re genuinely undecided, drop it if you’re confident about medical science.
Scaling Strategy for Medical Science
Because Chemistry and Maths Methods are locked in as prerequisites, your scaling strategy is similar to what it would be for pharmacy or veterinary science โ but with one important difference. Medical science applicants, particularly those targeting UNSW or Sydney, are often choosing between this degree and straight science degrees, which means the subject mix can be slightly more flexible.
Here’s the scaling picture for the subjects most commonly taken by medical science applicants:
The optimal combination for a top-tier medical science application: Chemistry, Maths Methods, English Advanced, Biology, and either Specialist Maths or Physics. If you can handle Specialist Maths on top of Methods, the scaling can contribute an extra 2โ4 ATAR points compared to taking a neutrally scaling subject โ and at the 95โ98 ATAR level that UNSW and Sydney demand, those points can be decisive.
If you’re targeting mid-tier programs (UTS, Macquarie, Newcastle), the same subjects work, but the pressure to maximise every point through scaling is lower. A strong performance in the core four (Chem, Methods, English Adv, Biology) is usually sufficient. For more on how these choices interact with the ATAR calculation system itself, our guide to picking subjects that maximise your final score walks through the mechanics.
Medical Science vs Biomedical Science vs Health Science
This is the decision that traps more Year 12 students than almost any other. The three degrees sound similar, they often share prerequisites, and universities market them in overlapping ways. But they lead to different experiences and different postgraduate options.
Medical Science
- Focus: Human disease mechanisms, pathology, clinical diagnostics
- ATAR: 65โ98 (huge spread based on uni)
- Best for: Students specifically targeting postgraduate medicine or medical research
- Key feature: At UNSW/Sydney, functions as a structured pre-med degree
- Downside: At lower-tier unis, the name sounds more clinical than the content actually is
Biomedical Science
- Focus: Molecular biology, biochemistry, genetics, physiology
- ATAR: 65โ95 (similar spread, slightly different tier positions)
- Best for: Students interested in research, biotech, or keeping the widest possible options open
- Key feature: More lab-focused, more flexible, available at more universities
- Downside: Less structured pre-med pathway than UNSW’s medical science
Health Science
- Focus: Public health, healthcare systems, health promotion, broader context
- ATAR: 55โ85 (generally lower than both)
- Best for: Public health, health policy, allied health prep, or a higher bar than degrees like nursing
- Key feature: Less science-heavy, more social science and systems thinking
- Downside: Weaker preparation for GAMSAT and postgraduate medicine than med/biomed science
If you’re certain you want to aim for postgraduate medicine and you can get the ATAR, UNSW or Sydney’s Medical Science is the most direct undergraduate pathway. If you want maximum flexibility and aren’t sure about medicine, Biomedical Science is the safer choice. If you’re interested in health but less interested in hard science, Health Science is the better fit. Don’t choose based on which name sounds most impressive โ choose based on what you actually want to study for three years.
What Actually Happens After You Graduate
This is the part that university marketing materials tend to gloss over. A Bachelor of Medical Science is not a professional qualification. It doesn’t qualify you to do anything specific in the healthcare system โ no registration, no clinical authority, no prescribing rights. What it gives you is a foundation, and what you build on that foundation determines your career.
Based on recent graduate outcome surveys and GEMSAS data, here’s roughly where medical science graduates end up:
- Postgraduate Medicine (MD/DMD): Approximately 15โ25% of graduates from top-tier programs (UNSW, Sydney, Monash) successfully gain entry to postgraduate medicine. The rate is lower at mid-tier universities. This is the most competitive and most common aspiration, but it’s far from guaranteed.
- Other Postgraduate Clinical Degrees: Another 10โ15% go into postgraduate programs like physiotherapy, optometry, or pharmacy โ degrees that provide actual professional registration.
- Research & Higher Degrees: Around 15โ20% pursue Honours, Masters, or PhDs in medical research, pathology, or related fields.
- Industry & Other Roles: The remaining 40โ50% enter the workforce directly in roles like clinical trial coordination, pharmaceutical industry (sales, regulatory, marketing), medical writing, science communication, or laboratory technology. Some transition into completely different fields using the degree as a generalist qualification.
This is the most common mindset among medical science students, and it’s not necessarily wrong โ but it carries risk. If you start a medical science degree with a vague plan of “maybe medicine afterwards,” you need to understand that the GPA you achieve in medical science will determine whether that “maybe” becomes a reality. A student with a 96 ATAR who coasts through medical science with a 5.0 GPA will find it very difficult to get into postgraduate medicine. The degree doesn’t do the work for you โ it just gives you the environment to do it in.
Common Questions
For 2026 entry, ATAR requirements range dramatically depending on the university. At UNSW and the University of Sydney, where medical science functions as a direct pre-medical pathway, you need an ATAR of approximately 95.00 to 98.00. At mid-tier universities like UTS, Macquarie, and Newcastle, the range sits between 75.00 and 87.00. At accessible universities like Griffith or Federation, the ATAR drops to around 65.00 to 73.00.
Not always, and this is the biggest source of confusion. At some universities (like UNSW and Sydney), Medical Science is a distinct, highly structured degree designed specifically for students aiming for medicine or medical research. At other universities, ‘Medical Science’ and ‘Biomedical Science’ are essentially the same degree with different names. You have to check the specific curriculum of each university rather than relying on the title alone.
No. Even at UNSW, where the Bachelor of Medical Science is closely aligned with the Doctor of Medicine, it does not guarantee entry. Students must still achieve a minimum GPA (typically 5.5+ out of 7.0) and meet other progression criteria. At most other universities, a medical science degree is simply one of many possible undergraduate pathways into postgraduate medicine, and you will compete against graduates from every other degree via the GAMSAT and GEMSAS process.
Yes. Chemistry is a formal prerequisite at virtually every Bachelor of Medical Science program in Australia. Mathematics Methods is also required or strongly assumed at most institutions, particularly those that function as pre-medical pathways. English is a standard prerequisite. The subject requirements for medical science are nearly identical to those for pharmacy โ both demand a strong grounding in physical sciences.
Without postgraduate study, common roles include medical researcher, laboratory scientist, clinical trial coordinator, pathology assistant, pharmaceutical sales, and science communication. However, a large percentage of medical science graduates use the degree as a stepping stone to postgraduate clinical degrees (medicine, dentistry, physiotherapy) or higher research degrees (Masters, PhD). Very few graduates work as ‘medical scientists’ in the clinical sense without further specialization.
Yes. UNSW’s Bachelor of Medical Science is one of the most competitive undergraduate science programs in Australia, with an ATAR requirement of approximately 96.00 to 98.00 for 2026 entry. It is not a generalist science degree โ it is a structured pre-medical program with a capped cohort, and it attracts the same caliber of student as direct medicine pathways at other universities.
Disclaimer: ATAR cut-offs fluctuate between years and offer rounds. The figures above reflect 2025โ2026 published data from individual university admissions pages and should be treated as indicative ranges for 2026 entry, not fixed thresholds. Always verify current requirements directly with the university. This article does not constitute formal admissions advice.
To see where your current marks might land, try our free ATAR calculator. If you want to understand the mechanics behind the number, our breakdown of how the ATAR is actually calculated clears it up.

