What ATAR Do I Need for Engineering?
Every university cut-off, a full subject scaling breakdown, and every alternative pathway — so you know exactly where you stand.
To get into a Bachelor of Engineering at a Group of Eight university, you generally need an ATAR between 85.00 and 95.00 — depending on the specialisation and the institution. Mid-tier universities typically require 70.00 to 85.00, while regional universities accept ATARs from the high 50s to low 70s. Engineering is less competitive than law or medicine, but the right subject choices and scaling can shift your effective ATAR by a significant margin.
What Is an ATAR — and How Does It Work for Engineering?
The Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) is a percentile ranking from 0.00 to 99.95 that shows how your overall Year 12 academic performance compares to every other student in your state or territory. An ATAR of 80.00 means you performed better than 80% of your cohort — it is not a percentage mark.
For engineering, your ATAR matters, but it interacts with two other critical factors that many students underestimate: subject scaling and prerequisites. A student with a raw score that would produce an ATAR of 78 can end up with a selection rank of 85 or higher if they chose high-scaling subjects. Conversely, a student with strong raw marks in low-scaling subjects might miss out even though their “percentage correct” looks impressive on paper.
Universities make offers based on your Selection Rank, which is your ATAR plus any adjustment factors (bonus points). When you see a published “ATAR cut-off,” it is actually the lowest Selection Rank that received an offer in the most recent round — not necessarily a raw ATAR. This distinction matters more for engineering than most people realise.
Engineering sits in an interesting position in the ATAR landscape. It is competitive — but not at the extreme level of medicine (99+), law (97+), or dentistry (96+). The range is wide: from the mid-50s at the most accessible regional campuses to the low-to-mid-90s at the most sought-after Go8 programs. That wide range means your subject choices, your state, and your willingness to consider different institutions or specialisations all have a meaningful impact on where you end up.
Group of Eight ATAR Cut-Offs for Engineering (2025–2026)
The Group of Eight (Go8) represents Australia’s eight leading research-intensive universities. Their engineering programs are the most competitive in the country — particularly at UNSW, the University of Melbourne, and the University of Sydney, all of which consistently rank among the world’s top 50 engineering schools.
Importantly, cut-offs vary significantly by specialisation within the same university. Aerospace Engineering at UNSW might require an ATAR of 93, while Civil Engineering at the same institution could be 91. The table below shows the general range for the most common Bachelor of Engineering entry.
| University | Degree | ATAR Range | Demand Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| UNSW Sydney | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~91.00–93.00 | Very High |
| University of Melbourne | Bachelor of Science (Engineering pathway) | ~85.00–92.00 | Very High |
| University of Sydney | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~90.00–92.00 | Very High |
| Monash University | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~86.00–90.00 | High |
| Australian National University (ANU) | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~85.00–88.00 | High |
| University of Queensland (UQ) | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~82.00–87.00 | High |
| University of Western Australia (UWA) | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~80.00–85.00 | Moderate |
| University of Adelaide | Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) | ~75.00–80.00 | Moderate |
The University of Melbourne does not offer a direct-entry Bachelor of Engineering. Instead, you enrol in a Bachelor of Science (or Bachelor of Design for some streams) with an Engineering major, then complete a Masters of Engineering (2–3 years). The total pathway takes 5–6 years. Your ATAR gets you into the BSc; your GPA in that degree determines masters entry. This model is called the “Melbourne Model.”
Why UNSW leads the pack: UNSW’s Faculty of Engineering is the largest in Australia and consistently ranked in the global top 50. It offers the widest range of specialisations (17+ streams) and has deep industry connections, particularly in aerospace, mining, and renewable energy. This drives demand — and ATAR cut-offs — higher than almost any other engineering program in the country.
Why Adelaide sits lower: The University of Adelaide has historically had more accessible engineering entry despite being a Go8 member. It offers strong programs in mining, petroleum, and aerospace engineering and benefits from South Australia’s defence industry hub. If you want a Go8 engineering degree with a relatively lower ATAR threshold, Adelaide is worth serious consideration.
Mid-Tier & Regional University Cut-Offs
Australia’s mid-tier and regional universities produce excellent, fully accredited engineers. Employers in civil construction, mining, local government, and manufacturing actively recruit from these institutions — often with less competition than Go8 graduates face for the same roles. For many students, these programs represent better value: lower ATAR requirements, smaller class sizes, and strong practical placement opportunities.
| University | Approx ATAR Cut-off | Notable Strengths |
|---|---|---|
| RMIT University | ~70.00–80.00 | Industry-integrated learning; strong in aerospace, civil, and electrical |
| UTS (University of Technology Sydney) | ~80.00–85.00 | Practical focus; strong industry partnerships in CBD location |
| QUT (Queensland University of Technology) | ~72.00–78.00 | Guaranteed entry scheme; strong civil and mechanical programs |
| University of Wollongong | ~70.00–78.00 | Strong in mining, materials, and environmental engineering |
| Swinburne University of Technology | ~65.00–75.00 | Industry-based learning; strong in robotics and IoT |
| Deakin University | ~65.00–72.00 | Flexible online + on-campus; strong in civil and environmental |
| University of Newcastle | ~65.00–75.00 | Strong in civil, mining, and environmental; regional campus options |
| La Trobe University | ~60.00–70.00 | Civil engineering focus; regional campus in Bendigo |
| UniSC (University of the Sunshine Coast) | ~60.00–67.00 | Civil engineering; emerging program with small cohorts |
| Charles Sturt University | ~60.00–65.00 | Civil engineering; distance education available |
| UniSQ (University of Southern Queensland) | ~60.00–65.00 | Civil, agricultural, and mechanical; strong rural focus |
| CQUniversity | ~60.00–65.00 | Wide range of specialisations; flexible delivery modes |
| Federation University | ~55.00–60.00 | Lowest published cut-off; civil and mining engineering |
Every Bachelor of Engineering accredited by Engineers Australia qualifies you for graduate membership and — after completing the required work experience — registration as a Professional Engineer (RPEng). A degree from Federation University leads to the same professional registration as a degree from UNSW. The brand matters for your first job; competence matters for everything after.
A practical strategy: If your ATAR sits in the 65–75 range, consider starting at a strong mid-tier university like RMIT, QUT, or Wollongong, performing well in first year, and then applying to transfer to a Go8 program. Credit transfer arrangements between universities mean you typically don’t lose time — and you arrive with a proven academic track record rather than just an ATAR.
ATAR by Engineering Specialisation
Engineering is not a single field — it is a family of disciplines, and ATAR cut-offs vary meaningfully between them. Understanding these differences lets you strategically choose a specialisation that matches both your ATAR and your interests.
The pattern is clear: specialisations with a technology or defence flavour (aerospace, mechatronics, software) attract the highest ATARs because they are perceived as more “prestigious” and have strong growth narratives. Traditional disciplines like civil and mining — which actually employ the largest numbers of engineers in Australia — tend to have lower cut-offs despite offering excellent career prospects and salaries.
Many universities allow you to transfer between engineering streams after first year, provided you meet GPA requirements. Entering via civil engineering (lower ATAR) and then transferring to mechanical or electrical in second year is a well-trodden path — but it depends on the specific university’s internal transfer policies. Check before you enrol.
Subject Scaling Guide for Engineering
Scaling is the single most misunderstood aspect of the ATAR system — and it matters enormously for engineering aspirants. Here is how it works: scaling adjusts your raw study scores based on how difficult it was to achieve high marks in that subject relative to all other subjects. If a subject has a cohort of high-achieving students where it is hard to stand out, it scales up. If a subject has a cohort where high marks are relatively easy to achieve, it scales down.
For engineering, this means your subject choices in Year 11 and 12 can shift your final ATAR by 5 to 15 points — a difference that determines which university and which specialisation you can access.
Visual Scaling Guide: Key Subjects for Engineering
The bars below represent the approximate scaling impact of each subject. Higher bars = greater positive scaling (your scaled score is higher than your raw score). This is based on aggregate data across NSW (HSC) and Victoria (VCE); exact figures vary by state and year.
What This Means in Practice
Scenario A: A student scores 80% raw in Specialist Mathematics, Mathematical Methods, Physics, Chemistry, and English Advanced. Because all four STEM subjects scale up, their ATAR might land around 88–91.
Scenario B: A student scores 85% raw in General Mathematics, English Standard, Business Studies, Biology, and PDHPE. Despite higher raw percentages, the negative scaling on General Maths and English Standard drags their ATAR down to around 76–80.
The student in Scenario B answered more exam questions correctly — but the student in Scenario A gets into a better engineering program. That is the power (and the controversy) of scaling.
State-by-State Scaling Notes
| State/Territory | Highest-Scaling Maths | Key Scaling Quirk |
|---|---|---|
| NSW (HSC) | Mathematics Extension 1 & 2 | Extension 2 is the single highest-scaling HSC subject; Extension 1 also scales extremely well |
| Victoria (VCE) | Specialist Mathematics | Spec Maths is the highest-scaling VCE subject by a wide margin; can add 8–10 points to a study score of 30 |
| Queensland (ATAR) | Mathematical Methods + Specialist | Queensland’s new ATAR system (post-2019) applies scaling similarly to VIC/NSW; both maths subjects scale up significantly |
| WA (WACE) | Mathematics Specialist | Maths Specialist and Maths Methods both scale up; Physics scales moderately |
| SA/NT (SACE) | Mathematical Methods & Specialist | Scaling applied through the university aggregate calculation; Specialist Maths adds the most |
| Tasmania (TCE) | Mathematics Methods (Level 4) | Smaller cohort means less dramatic scaling but same directional pattern |
| ACT (BSSS) | Specialist Mathematics | ACT scales similarly to NSW; double major in maths scales very well |
Scaling only helps if you perform reasonably well in the subject. A raw score of 30% in Specialist Mathematics that scales up to 35% is still worse than a raw score of 75% in Mathematical Methods that scales up to 80%. The golden rule: choose the highest-level maths and science you can confidently handle. That maximises both your raw score and your scaling benefit.
Prerequisites vs Assumed Knowledge
This distinction trips up hundreds of engineering applicants every year. Understanding it can save you from a rejected application — or from enrolling in a degree you are not prepared for.
Prerequisites (Mandatory)
- You must have completed this subject to be eligible for an offer
- No prerequisite = automatic rejection, regardless of ATAR
- Usually specified as a minimum grade (e.g., “Sound Achievement in Queensland, or equivalent”)
- Common prerequisites: Mathematical Methods, and sometimes Physics or Specialist Maths
- Can sometimes be met via bridging courses before semester starts
Assumed Knowledge (Recommended)
- You should have studied this subject — but it is not formally required
- You can still receive an offer without it
- Universities strongly recommend it because first-year content assumes this foundation
- Common assumed knowledge: Physics, Chemistry, Specialist Mathematics
- Skipping it means you will need to do extra catch-up work in first year
Prerequisites by University (Engineering)
| University | Prerequisite | Assumed Knowledge |
|---|---|---|
| UNSW Sydney | Mathematics Advanced + Extension 1 (or equivalent) | Physics, Chemistry |
| University of Sydney | Mathematics Advanced (minimum 80) or equivalent | Mathematics Extension 1, Physics |
| University of Melbourne | Mathematical Methods (VCE) / equivalent | Specialist Maths, Physics, Chemistry |
| Monash University | Mathematical Methods (VCE) / equivalent | Specialist Maths, Physics |
| ANU | Mathematical Methods (NSW) / Specialist Maths (VCE) / equivalent | Physics |
| UQ | Mathematical Methods (Queensland) / equivalent | Specialist Maths, Physics, Chemistry |
| UWA | Mathematics Methods (WACE) / equivalent | Mathematics Specialist, Physics, Chemistry |
| University of Adelaide | Mathematical Methods (SACE) / equivalent | Specialist Maths, Physics |
| RMIT | Mathematical Methods (VCE) / equivalent | Physics |
| QUT | Mathematical Methods (Queensland) / equivalent | Physics, Chemistry |
| University of Newcastle | Mathematics (NSW) or equivalent | Mathematics Extension 1, Physics |
| Federation University | Mathematical Methods (VCE) or equivalent | Physics |
Most universities offer intensive bridging courses in mathematics and physics over summer (December–February). These satisfy prerequisite requirements at many (but not all) institutions. UNSW and Sydney are stricter — they generally require the prerequisite to be met during Year 12, not via bridging. Always confirm with the specific faculty before relying on a bridging course.
Combined Degrees vs Straight Bachelor of Engineering
Engineering is one of the most commonly combined degrees in Australia. Understanding how combined degrees affect your ATAR requirements — and whether they are worth the extra time — is an important strategic decision.
Straight Bachelor of Engineering
- 4 years full-time (Honours embedded)
- Focused purely on engineering discipline
- Slightly lower ATAR in most cases
- Faster entry to the workforce
- Less HECS-HELP debt
- Available at all accredited providers
Combined Engineering Degree
- 5–6 years full-time (e.g., BE/BA, BE/BCom, BE/BSc)
- Broader skill set — business, language, science, or law
- Often similar or only 1–3 points higher ATAR
- More versatile career options
- Higher total HECS-HELP debt
- Available at most Go8 and mid-tier universities
Surprising fact: At many universities, the ATAR cut-off for a combined degree like Engineering/Arts is the same or only marginally higher than the straight Bachelor of Engineering. This is because the engineering component sets the floor, and the paired degree (especially Arts) does not significantly increase competition. If you are undecided, applying for a combined degree “just in case” rarely costs you ATAR-wise.
Popular Combinations and Their Relative ATAR Impact
| Combined Degree | Duration | ATAR Impact vs Straight BE | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engineering / Arts | 5 years | Same or +1–2 | Language skills, humanities breadth, international focus |
| Engineering / Commerce | 5.5 years | +2–5 | Management consulting, project management, entrepreneurship |
| Engineering / Science | 5 years | Same or +1–3 | Research, biotechnology, advanced materials |
| Engineering / Law | 6–6.5 years | +5–10 | Patent law, construction law, technology regulation |
| Engineering / Computer Science | 5 years | +2–4 | Software engineering, AI, embedded systems |
Adjustment Factors That Lower Your Required ATAR
Adjustment factors (formerly called “bonus points”) are added to your ATAR to produce your Selection Rank. For engineering, they can make a real difference — particularly for students from regional areas or those who studied high-level STEM subjects. The key categories are:
| Factor Type | Typical Points | How It Works for Engineering |
|---|---|---|
| Subject bonus (STEM) | 2–5 points | Many universities award points for completing Specialist Mathematics, Physics, or Chemistry at a specified level. UNSW’s HSC Plus scheme, for example, adds up to 5 points for high performance in Extension 1 and Extension 2 Maths. |
| Regional/rural adjustment | 2–8 points | Students who attended a school or lived in a regional or remote area receive bonus points. UNE, Newcastle, and Charles Sturt are particularly generous with regional adjustments. |
| Equity / disadvantage | 2–10 points | Students who experienced educational disadvantage (financial hardship, illness, disability, carer responsibilities) can receive significant adjustments. UAC’s Educational Access Scheme and VTAC’s SEAS are the main pathways. |
| First-in-family | 1–4 points | Some universities add points if you are the first in your immediate family to attend university. Check individual schemes. |
| Elite athlete / performer | 1–5 points | Recognised elite athletes or performers may receive adjustment factors at participating institutions. |
| Indigenous adjustment | Varies | Indigenous applicants may receive adjustment factors and should also explore dedicated entry programs at most universities. |
Most universities cap the total adjustment at 5–10 points above your ATAR. However, a student with an ATAR of 83 who qualifies for a 5-point subject bonus and a 4-point regional adjustment could receive a Selection Rank of 92 — enough for some Go8 engineering programs. Always apply for every scheme you might qualify for. You will not receive points you don’t claim.
Alternative Pathways If You Miss the Cut-Off
Missing your target ATAR for engineering is genuinely not a problem — engineering has more alternative entry routes than almost any other field. The industry values practical skills and accreditation over the prestige of your entry pathway.
Complete a Diploma of Engineering (typically 1–2 years) at TAFE. Many universities offer guaranteed articulation into a Bachelor of Engineering with up to 1 year of credit. This pathway is widely used and respected — and your TAFE marks replace your ATAR as the entry metric.
Universities like UTS, Newcastle, La Trobe, and Charles Sturt offer foundation programs specifically designed to prepare students for engineering degrees. Successful completion guarantees entry into the bachelor’s program — no ATAR required for the foundation course itself.
Enrol in engineering at a regional or mid-tier university, achieve a strong GPA (usually 5.0–6.0+ on a 7.0 scale), and apply for credit transfer to your preferred institution. Many Go8 universities accept significant numbers of transfer students each year. You lose little or no time if credit is granted.
Several universities (including RMIT and UniSA) offer 2-year Associate Degrees in Engineering Technology. These are standalone qualifications that can also articulate into a full Bachelor of Engineering with up to 2 years of credit.
Complete a related degree (Science, Mathematics, Physics, or even Architecture) and then apply for a Master of Engineering (2–3 years). This is the standard pathway at the University of Melbourne, but masters programs exist at many other universities too. Your undergraduate GPA replaces your ATAR entirely.
Whether you enter via TAFE, a foundation year, a transfer, or a masters pathway, the final degree you hold is the same accredited Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) or Master of Engineering. Employers and registration boards do not distinguish between entry pathways — only the qualification itself.
State-by-State Quick Reference
ATAR cut-offs, scaling systems, and admissions processes differ by state. Here is a concise snapshot of what engineering entry looks like in each jurisdiction.
| State | Admissions Centre | Top Engineering ATAR | Lowest Engineering ATAR | Key Detail |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NSW / ACT | UAC | ~93 (UNSW Aerospace) | ~65 (regional campuses) | Maths Extension 1 is effectively a prerequisite for Go8 |
| Victoria | VTAC | ~92 (Monash Mechatronics) | ~55 (Federation Civil) | Spec Maths scaling is the single biggest ATAR lever |
| Queensland | QTAC | ~87 (UQ) | ~60 (CQUni, UniSQ) | QUT offers guaranteed entry at published ATAR thresholds |
| Western Australia | TISC | ~85 (UWA) | ~60 (regional options) | UWA offers a direct BE unlike Melbourne’s model |
| South Australia / NT | SATAC | ~80 (Adelaide) | ~60 (UniSA regional) | Adelaide is the most accessible Go8 for engineering |
| Tasmania | UTAS direct | ~75 (UTAS) | ~65 (UTAS with adjustments) | UTAS is the only provider; generous adjustment schemes |
Frequently Asked Questions
Key Takeaways
- Go8 engineering requires an ATAR between 85.00 and 95.00 — with UNSW and Sydney at the top, and Adelaide as the most accessible Go8 option.
- Mid-tier and regional universities offer accredited engineering degrees from ATARs in the 60s and 70s — Federation University sits as low as 55.00.
- Subject scaling is your biggest lever. Specialist Mathematics alone can add 5–10 points to your effective ATAR. Choose the highest-level maths and science you can handle.
- Prerequisites matter as much as ATAR. Most Go8 programs require Mathematical Methods (or equivalent) as a minimum; many effectively require Extension 1 / Specialist Maths. Missing a prerequisite means automatic rejection regardless of your ATAR.
- Specialisation choice affects your ATAR requirement. Aerospace and mechatronics demand the highest ATARs; civil and mining are typically the most accessible — often 5–10 points lower at the same university.
- Combined degrees often cost little or no extra ATAR over a straight BE, making them a strategically smart choice if you are undecided about a second discipline.
- Adjustment factors can add 5–10 points to your Selection Rank through STEM subject bonuses, regional adjustments, and equity schemes. Claim every point you are entitled to.
- Alternative pathways are abundant: TAFE diplomas, foundation years, associate degrees, inter-university transfers, and postgraduate masters all lead to the same accredited engineering qualification.
- All accredited engineering degrees — regardless of entry pathway or institution — lead to the same professional registration as a Professional Engineer (RPEng) through Engineers Australia.
Disclaimer: ATAR cut-offs change every year based on applicant demand, cohort performance, and university policy. The figures in this article are based on published 2025–2026 data and should be used as a guide only. Scaling data is approximate and varies by state, year, and individual score level. Always verify current cut-offs, prerequisites, and adjustment factor schemes directly with universities and your state’s tertiary admissions centre (UAC, VTAC, QTAC, SATAC, TISC, or UTAS) before making enrolment decisions.

