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A Level rank points calculator · UAS out of 70

Your A Level rank points, out of 70, in ten seconds.

Singapore moved to a 70 point University Admission Score. This calculator does what most do not: it applies the official MOE rebasing and keeps your best case, so a 4th subject or Mother Tongue counts only when it actually helps. Free, no sign up, and you can share your result with a link.

Grade to rank points
GradeH2H1
A2010
B17.58.75
C157.5
D12.56.25
E105
S52.5
U00

Your A Level rank points, or University Admission Score (UAS), are scored out of 70: your three best H2 content subjects at 20 points each, plus H1 General Paper at 10. A fourth content subject and H1 Mother Tongue are added through official rebasing only if they raise your score. Project Work is no longer counted.

The calculator

Work out your rank points

Enter your grades. The score updates as you go, and the breakdown shows exactly which subjects were counted and why.

Required for a full score.

Optional, counted only if it raises your score

The calculator checks your score with and without these and keeps whichever is higher, exactly as the universities do. You never have to decide.

0 / 70

Pick your three H2 subjects and your H1 General Paper grade to see your rank points.

How it works

How A Level rank points are calculated

From the 2024 JC1 intake onward (the 2025 A Level cohort was the first to be scored this way), the University Admission Score is out of 70 points. It is built from your three best H2 content subjects and H1 General Paper:

What countsPoints
Three best H2 content subjects20 each, so up to 60
H1 General Paperup to 10
Maximum70

A 4th content subject (H1 or H2) and H1 Mother Tongue can be added, but only if they raise your score. When one is added, the total is rebased from 80 back to 70; when both are added, it is rebased from 90 back to 70:

Your subjectsHow the UAS is worked out
3 H2 + GP only3 H2 + GP, out of 70
+ one extra (4th subject or Mother Tongue)(3 H2 + GP + extra) / 80 x 70
+ both(3 H2 + GP + Mother Tongue + 4th subject) / 90 x 70

Because adding a subject also changes the denominator, an extra can sometimes lower the result. That is why the rule is "only if it improves", and why this calculator computes every case and keeps the highest. If you take four H2 subjects, you have no H1 content subject, so your weakest H2 is rescored on the H1 scale, then rebased the same way.

Project Work is no longer counted in the UAS. It is now graded Pass or Fail, and a Pass is still required to qualify for university. H2 Knowledge and Inquiry, from the 2026 examination, is no longer accepted in place of General Paper; if taken, it counts as a H2 content subject.

Worked example

A student scores A, A, B in three H2 subjects, A in General Paper, and takes H1 Mother Tongue at A. The base is 20 + 20 + 17.5 + 10 = 67.5. Adding Mother Tongue gives (67.5 + 10) / 80 x 70 = 67.81, which is higher, so it is kept. Without the Mother Tongue the score would have stayed 67.5.

Sources and verification

The grade table, the 80 and 90 rebasing, the four H2 rule and the "only if it improves" maximisation are taken from the Ministry of Education via Anderson Serangoon Junior College, University Admission Score and the NUS Office of Admissions admission requirements. This is a precise score calculator, not an admission predictor: real offers also depend on course requirements, bonus points and demand.

Verified against MOE and NUS, last reviewed 20 June 2026

Common questions

Rank points, answered

Your rank points, or University Admission Score, are out of 70: your three best H2 content subjects at 20 points each (up to 60), plus H1 General Paper at 10. A 4th content subject and H1 Mother Tongue are added through official rebasing (out of 80, or out of 90 for both) only if they raise your score.

Out of 70. The 90 point system applied to the 2024 A Level cohort and earlier. From the 2025 cohort onward the maximum is 70, because Project Work was removed and the structure changed. Universities convert older 90 point scores to the 70 point scale for comparison.

No. Project Work is now graded Pass or Fail and is not counted in the University Admission Score. You still need a Pass in Project Work to qualify for university admission, but it does not add or remove rank points.

Only if they raise your score. The calculator works out your score with and without them and keeps whichever is higher. When an extra subject is included, your total is rebased from 80 to 70, or from 90 to 70 if both a 4th subject and Mother Tongue help.

It depends entirely on the course you are aiming for, since each programme admits a different range. Rather than a single number, look at the Indicative Grade Profile of your target course and aim above its lower bound. The University Goal Planner is built for exactly this.

You have no separate H1 content subject, so your weakest H2 is rescored on the H1 scale and your score is rebased. The calculator handles this automatically when you tick the four H2 option, and it still keeps your best possible result.

When you are ready to act on your target

Turn a target into the grade

The weekly A Level programme

The standard, every week.

One essay or case study a week, personally marked with a worked model and a video walkthrough, from materials written by the author of the H1 and H2 TYS answer keys sold at Popular. This is the core JC1 and JC2 programme.

  • A marked essay or case study each week
  • Worked model plus a video walkthrough
  • Onsite, live Zoom or recordings

In JC2? See Last Lap. In JC1? See Expedite.

Free resources

Get the printable Summary and Diagrams pack.

The notes are free to read because the concepts should be. Join the mailing list for the 112 page Summary and Diagrams pack, drawn the way ETG teaches them, plus new chapters and worked answers as we publish. You can also follow along on Telegram.

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Save this for results season.

Bookmark the calculator, share your result with a link, and come back as your grades change. When you are ready to move a grade, a free trial lesson with a specialist ETG economics tutor is the place to start.

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