Convert your raw UCAT marks into scaled scores out of 900, and see your total cognitive scaled score out of 2700.
44 questions, each worth 1 mark.
35 questions, with 23 worth 1 mark and 12 worth 2 marks (47 marks in total).
36 questions, each worth 1 mark.
69-question subtest, scaled differently and not included in the cognitive total of 2700.
The UCAT Consortium publishes official test statistics each year. Use the 2025 statistics to convert your total cognitive scaled score (out of 2700) into a percentile.
View 2025 UCAT statisticsDisclaimer: The conversions on this page are estimates derived from publicly available UCAT score data and are designed as a study tool. Official UCAT scaling can vary between sittings, so your real scaled score may differ.
After every UCAT mock, sit down and use this UCAT score calculator to convert your raw marks into a scaled score out of 900 for each subtest, plus a total cognitive score out of 2700. The calculator covers all four UCAT ANZ subtests — Verbal Reasoning (VR), Decision Making (DM), Quantitative Reasoning (QR) and Situational Judgement (SJT) — and updates the moment you enter your marks.
Use the simple Decision Making mode if you only have your total raw mark, or switch to detailed mode to enter your 1-mark and 2-mark question scores separately for a closer estimate. SJT is converted to a scaled score out of 900 but, like in the real UCAT, is reported separately and not added to your total cognitive scaled score of 2700.
The UCAT Consortium converts your raw marks (the number of marks you score on each subtest) into a scaled score between 300 and 900. The scaling adjusts for differences in question difficulty, which is why the same raw mark can lead to slightly different scaled scores between versions of the test. Our raw-to-scaled UCAT converter uses formulas derived from public UCAT statistics to closely approximate the official scaling.
The UCAT Consortium uses a process called item-response theory to convert raw marks into a scaled score from 300 to 900 for each subtest. In simple terms, you are rewarded more for getting harder questions correct, and rewarded less for getting easier questions correct. Our calculator takes into account the relative distribution of challenging and simple questions in each subtest, and estimates final conversions using publicly available UCAT statistics, so you can quickly check what raw marks on a mock translate to.
The total UCAT cognitive score is out of 2700 — the sum of your scaled scores out of 900 for VR, DM and QR. SJT is reported as a separate mark out of 900, or a Band 1 to Band 4 result if you're in the UK. It is not included in the 2700 total.
As a rough guide, for non-rural applicants, a total cognitive score above 2400 is quite competitive and should be competitive enough for most medicine and dentistry interviews in Australia and New Zealand. Cut-offs vary depending on the institution.
Decision Making contains 35 questions worth 47 raw marks. 23 questions are worth 1 mark, and 12 questions are worth up to 2 marks (1 for a partially correct answer, 2 for fully correct). Use the detailed toggle above for a more accurate scaled score estimate.
It is an estimate, not the official result. Real UCAT scaling can vary slightly between sittings, so treat the output as a benchmarking tool while you prepare.
Yes — completely free, no sign-up, no account, no payment.