What UCAT Score Will Get Me Into Med?

6
min
April 12, 2026
#Undergraduate

The UCAT is a two-hour standardised, computer-based exam, designed to assess the suitability of candidates to study undergraduate medicine. Suitability is measured through an assessment of a student’s critical thinking capacity, emotional intelligence and non-verbal reasoning.

How is the UCAT marked?

The UCAT exam is split into four sections: Verbal Reasoning, Decision Making, Quantitative Reasoning and Situational Judgement (Abstract Reasoning was removed in 2025). Due to COVID-19, universities are excluding the Situational Judgement test from their prerequisite eligibility requirements. Performance is measured by a student’s percentile score - how many questions answered correctly relative to all other candidates.

UCAT FAQ's

How are UCAT scores calculated?

UCAT scores are calculated by converting the number of questions you got right into a ‘scaled score’. For more information about scaled score, check out our Exams and Interviews eBook. This ranges from 300 to 900 in each subtest. Your scores in each of the four cognitive subtests are added together to form an overall UCAT cognitive subtest score, which ranges from 2700 to 3600. Students also receive a separate score for UCAT Situational Judgement ranging from 300 to 900.

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What is a good UCAT score?

There is no clear indicator as to a ‘good’ UCAT score. However, we can assume that anything higher than one standard deviation above the mean can be considered a ‘good’ UCAT score.

UCAT Scores
Verbal Reasoning Decision Making Quantitative Reasoning Situational Judgement Total Score
Score Range 300–900 300–900 300–900 300–900 2700–3600
Mean 620 642 679 586 1,941
1st Quartile 560 580 580 541 1,750
Median (2nd Quartile) 610 650 660 593 1,930
3rd Quartile 670 710 780 638 2,130

What UCAT score do I need to get into medicine?

While the UCAT was once relatively new to New Zealand and Australia, it is now a well-established component of the medical admissions process. As such, there is a clearer understanding of competitive performance benchmarks — with students typically needing to aim above the 90th percentile, and realistically above the 95th percentile, to remain competitive for most medical schools. However, it is still not directly comparable to UK benchmarks, as teaching curricula and selection methodologies differ between ANZ and England, making it inappropriate to rely solely on UK-defined prerequisites.

How are the UCAT scores used?

UCAT results are made available prior to most application deadlines. The consortium will advise applicants to use their results to guide their academic choices, to reduce the chance of a dead-end application. However, universities will advise applicants to use your UCAT results to determine eligibility.

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Want to learn more?

If you have found this blog helpful, and would prefer to speak with a medical student or doctor one on one, you’ve come to the right place. MedView is the leading medical school preparation organisation in Australasia, with a proven record of success. Unlike our competitors, our team of academic advisors, doctors, medical students and expert tutors understand that there is more to med school preparation than basic UCAT courses.

As such, we offer private 1-1 mentoring, application assistance, personalised support, exam preparation workshops, and interview training for prospective medical students. The process from here on out is simple. An academic assessment is a chance for our team to get to know you and your child, where we can discuss their motivation for studying medicine, their current strengths and weaknesses relative to the entry criteria, and then finally how we can give them everything they need to make sure they are as best prepared for the road ahead as possible.

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