Where to start
Rank Point Calculator
Work out your A-Level rank points and see which courses your score can reach, based on each course's Indicative Grade Profile (IGP).
Poly IGP Comparison
Coming from poly? Match your GPA against the latest Indicative Grade Profiles (IGPs) to gauge where you stand for university admission.
Employment Trends
See how majors stack up on jobs and pay, using Graduate Employment Survey (GES) data - from median salary to employment rate.
Course Directory
Dig into any course in detail - from the median starting salary for fresh graduates to the estimated cut-off point.
Top Graduate Salaries
These courses had the highest median starting salaries in the 2025 GES.
Click on any of the courses to learn more.
Top Employment Rates
These courses had the highest overall employment rates in the 2025 GES.
Click on any of the courses to learn more.
- Medicine (NUS) - 100%
- Dentistry (NUS) - 100%
- Medicine (NTU) - 100%
- Arts (Academic Discipline & Education) (NTU) - 100%
- Science (Academic Discipline & Education) (NTU) - 100%
- Bachelor of Science in Computer Science & Game Design (SIT) - 100%
- Bachelor of Engineering with Honours in Naval Architecture (SIT) - 100%
- Bachelor in Science (Occupational Therapy) (SIT) - 100%
- Bachelor in Science (Physiotherapy) (SIT) - 100%
- Bachelor of Engineering with Honours in Aerospace Systems (SIT) - 100%
Universities.sg is a free, independent resource for prospective students, parents, and career advisors navigating Singapore university admissions. We compile official data from all six autonomous universities - NUS, NTU, SMU, SUTD, SIT, and SUSS - into a single, searchable platform covering 284 undergraduate programmes.
Our database includes Indicative Grade Profiles (IGP) for A-Level and polytechnic applicants, graduate employment rates and salary statistics from the Ministry of Education's Graduate Employment Survey (GES) spanning 2013 to the present, and enrollment data.
What you'll find here
The Indicative Grade Profile shows the A-Level scores of students actually admitted to each course in the most recent admissions exercise - the 10th percentile represents the bottom 10% of admitted students, the 90th percentile the top 10%. These are not minimum requirements: they show what scores really got in. IGP is published by NUS, NTU, and SMU; SUTD, SIT, and SUSS use holistic admissions and do not publish grade profiles, so their pages focus on employment outcomes instead.
The Graduate Employment Survey tracks what happens roughly six months after graduation: overall employment rate, full-time permanent employment, and starting salaries (median, mean, and the 25th to 75th percentile range). We aggregate every survey from 2013 to the present across all six universities, so you can see long-term trends rather than a single year's snapshot. Polytechnic applicants get the same treatment on a separate track - GPA cut-offs on the 4.0 scale for the courses that publish them.
The 70-point rank point system
Singapore's A-Level scoring now uses a 70-point University Admission Score: three H2 subjects worth up to 20 points each, plus General Paper worth up to 10. A fourth H2 or H1 subject and Mother Tongue count only when they improve your score, with the total normalised back to a 70-point scale. Historical cut-offs published under the old 90-point system are converted for comparison - our methodology page documents exactly how, including the assumptions involved.
How to use this site
Start with the A-Level calculator to work out your rank points and see which courses your score meets - "eligible" means you meet or exceed a course's 10th percentile IGP, though actual admission still depends on competition, interviews, and portfolios. Then compare courses side by side or explore graduate employment trends over time. Our guides pull the data together into longer reads on admissions strategy, the most competitive courses, and how NUS, NTU, and SMU differ. Questions about what a number means? The FAQ covers the common ones.
Data sourced from university admissions offices and the Ministry of Education. How we process it


