The National Benchmark Test โ NBT for short โ is a standardised assessment run by South Africa's Centre for Educational Testing for Access and Placement (CETAP), based at the University of Cape Town. It isn't a matric replacement. It sits alongside your NSC (matric) results and gives universities a second data point: how well-prepared are you for degree-level study?
The National Benchmark Test โ NBT for short โ is a standardised assessment run by South Africa's Centre for Educational Testing for Access and Placement (CETAP), based at the University of Cape Town. It isn't a matric replacement. It sits alongside your NSC (matric) results and gives universities a second data point: how well-prepared are you for degree-level study?
Here's the thing about the NBT: it doesn't test what you've memorised from the school syllabus. Instead, it measures academic readiness โ your ability to read extended texts critically, use quantitative reasoning in context, and apply mathematical concepts to novel problems. Two students with identical matric symbols can score very differently on the NBT, which is why universities find it useful.
CETAP launched the NBT in 2005 under a national higher-education initiative. UCT, Stellenbosch, Wits, UKZN, and roughly 25 other South African universities now either require or strongly recommend NBT results as part of their application process. Some faculties won't process your application at all without a valid NBT sitting โ so check each university's admissions page well before the deadline.
The NBT is not pass/fail. You don't "pass" or "fail" the NBT in the traditional sense. Instead, your raw score maps to one of three benchmark performance levels โ Proficient, Intermediate, or Basic โ and universities use those levels to decide whether to admit you directly, place you in an extended or foundation programme, or decline your application. That benchmark framework is what makes the NBT different from most other admissions tests globally.
Registration is managed entirely through the official NBT website (nbtests.uct.ac.za). There's a registration fee per test, multiple test dates run throughout the year at venues across South Africa, and you can sit the tests more than once if you want to try to improve your score.
Why does the NBT exist alongside matric? South African universities faced a consistent problem: matric symbols didn't reliably predict first-year academic performance. Some students with high matric marks struggled badly in their first semester; others with modest matric results thrived. The NBT was developed specifically to capture skills that school examinations tend not to test well โ extended reading under time pressure, applied quantitative reasoning, and the kind of mathematical thinking that degree programmes in Engineering and Science actually require. It's now embedded in the admissions processes of most major South African universities.
The NBT also gives international students and those who completed foreign curricula a standardised way to demonstrate academic readiness. If you finished school in Zimbabwe, Botswana, or another SADC country and want to study at a South African university, the NBT is often the mechanism universities use to benchmark your preparation against domestic applicants. Check with individual institutions โ most accept NBT results from international applicants as a supplementary assessment.
One practical point many students miss: your NBT results don't belong to any single university. CETAP holds the scores, and you authorise release to each institution through your profile on the CETAP portal. You can send the same results to UCT, Stellenbosch, Wits, and UKZN simultaneously, which is useful when you're applying to multiple universities at once. The report each university receives is identical โ your numerical score per test and your benchmark level. No university sees your scores for other tests unless those tests are part of their admission requirements.
If your first NBT sitting goes badly, don't panic. Many students rewrite. CETAP allows multiple sittings and you can register for a new date through the same portal. Some students improve significantly between their first and second sitting simply because they know what to expect. The format is consistent between test dates โ same question types, same time constraints, same difficulty profile โ so dedicated practice between sittings genuinely translates into score improvement.
Your NSC/matric result shows what you learned in the school curriculum. The NBT shows how ready you are for university-level academic demands. Most universities use both together. A strong matric with a low NBT benchmark can trigger placement in a foundation programme even if your subject points qualify you for direct entry.
Tests your ability to read and interpret complex academic texts โ the kind you'll encounter in lecture notes, journal articles, and assignments. Questions cover reading comprehension, inference, vocabulary in context, identifying main arguments, evaluating evidence, and understanding academic register. The AL section runs about 65โ70 multiple-choice questions over 50 minutes.
Tests your ability to manage and interpret quantitative information in real-world contexts โ graphs, tables, charts, statistics, and everyday numerical scenarios. It doesn't require advanced maths; think of it as applied numeracy and data interpretation. The QL section is roughly 60 multiple-choice questions over 50 minutes, bundled with the AL in the same sitting.
A separate, stand-alone test for students entering numerate degree programmes โ Engineering, Science, Commerce, Built Environment, and some Health Science programmes. The MAT is harder and longer than the AQL, covering algebra, functions, trigonometry, geometry, calculus basics, statistics, and mathematical reasoning. Around 60 questions over 3 hours.
Every NBT test is multiple-choice โ no essays, no short-answer responses, no open-ended questions. That's a significant advantage for test prep: you can practice eliminating wrong answers, managing time per question, and recognising distractor patterns, all skills that are trainable before the real sitting.
The AQL (AL + QL combined) runs roughly 2 hours in a single session. You'll sit both sections back-to-back without a significant break between them, so stamina matters. The MAT is written as a completely separate sitting โ you can't write AQL and MAT on the same day.
Each question has either four or five answer options. There's no negative marking reported by CETAP, so you should attempt every question rather than leaving blanks. On the NBT Academic Literacy questions in particular, reading pace is critical โ the texts are long and the questions require careful re-reading of specific passages.
For the MAT, you're allowed a non-programmable scientific calculator. Calculators are NOT permitted in the AQL sitting. Bring your ID and your booking confirmation to the venue โ no ID means no entry. Test centres are mostly at universities and large schools around South Africa; the list of venues is on the CETAP registration portal.
CETAP releases results approximately three weeks after the test date. You'll receive a personalised score report via email and through your online CETAP profile. The report shows your numerical score (1โ100) and your benchmark performance level for each test you wrote. If you're applying to multiple universities, they each access your results directly from CETAP โ you don't need to send separate copies.
One thing worth knowing: once you receive your results, you can share them with any university that uses the NBT system. Your scores don't expire after a single application year โ many universities accept results from the previous year, but confirm with each institution's admissions office because policies differ.
Practice tests are one of the most effective ways to get comfortable with the question style. Our NBT practice tests mirror the real format with multiple-choice questions across Academic Literacy, Quantitative Literacy, and Mathematics sections so you know exactly what you're walking into.
Understanding the question structure before you sit the real test removes one source of stress entirely. NBT questions aren't tricky in a trick-question sense โ they're demanding in that they require sustained concentration and precise reading. Every word in an AL passage can matter. Every data point in a QL graph can be relevant. Getting comfortable with that level of precision through regular timed practice is what separates confident test-takers from anxious ones on the day.
The NBT tests four-year university readiness โ not just your ability to pass a matric exam. That's a higher bar than many students expect when they first encounter the test. But it's also a very learnable standard: the academic literacy and quantitative reasoning skills the NBT measures are the same skills you'll use every week of your degree. Building them now pays dividends well beyond the test itself.
This is the question most first-time NBT candidates get confused about. Short answer: almost every university applicant writes the AQL. Only students applying to numerate faculties need to add the MAT.
The AQL (Academic + Quantitative Literacy combined) is the baseline test for entry into the Humanities, Social Sciences, Law, Education, and many Health Science programmes. If you're applying to Commerce, Business Science, or programmes with a significant maths component, individual universities may require the MAT in addition to the AQL. Engineering, Science, and Built Environment applicants almost always need the MAT.
Check the specific requirements on each university's website before registering โ don't assume. Some programmes at UCT and Wits require MAT even if you wrote Maths Literacy for matric. Others in the Arts and Social Sciences require only AQL. A few Commerce programmes at certain universities require both. Getting this wrong means you sit the wrong combination and have to re-register for the missing test, paying twice and potentially missing an application deadline.
If you're unsure and applying broadly, registering for both the AQL and MAT gives you the most flexibility. You can always sit the MAT and not submit those scores to a university that doesn't need it, but you can't retroactively add a MAT result you didn't write. The extra cost of the MAT registration is a small price compared to the stress of needing it and not having it.
Matric subject choice also matters here. If you wrote Mathematics (not Maths Literacy) and are applying to a Commerce or Science degree, assume you'll need the MAT unless the university explicitly states otherwise. If you wrote Maths Literacy, some universities will still require the MAT for certain Commerce programmes โ they use it to assess your mathematical readiness even if your matric subject was at a lower level. Don't let your school subject choice determine your test registration without double-checking the requirements.
The timing between the AQL and MAT sittings also matters if you need both. Since they're separate sessions, you need to register for each independently and may sit them on different days โ sometimes weeks apart. Budget enough time between sittings to prepare appropriately for the MAT, which requires deeper mathematical preparation than the QL section of the AQL. Many students write the AQL first, then return for the MAT a few weeks later after focused maths revision.
One more practical note: your results from both the AQL and MAT appear separately on your CETAP score report. Universities that need both will see both benchmark levels. If you score Proficient on the AQL but Intermediate on the MAT, admissions offices in engineering faculties will typically flag the MAT result โ it's the one that matters most for numerate programmes. Knowing this means you should prioritise MAT preparation if maths-heavy degrees are your main target.
Proficient benchmark โ Students who score in the Proficient band on all required tests are typically eligible for direct admission to mainstream degree programmes, subject to meeting the NSC point score and subject requirements as well. Universities like UCT and Stellenbosch use the NBT as a supplement to their Faculty Points Score (FPS), so a Proficient NBT result strengthens an application even when the applicant's matric points are borderline.
Some highly competitive programmes โ like UCT's MBChB (Medicine) or BSc (Actuarial Science) โ use absolute scores within the Proficient band to rank applicants. In these cases, the specific NBT number matters, not just the benchmark level.
Intermediate benchmark โ An Intermediate result doesn't mean rejection. Most universities offer Extended Curriculum Programmes (ECPs) or Foundation Courses designed for students who are capable but need additional academic development. These programmes typically run one extra year before the mainstream degree begins.
At Wits, Stellenbosch, and UKZN, Intermediate benchmark scores combined with solid matric points can still result in admission โ just into a structured support pathway rather than mainstream entry. The NBT result tells the university which students need that extra support, making placement more accurate than matric alone.
Basic benchmark โ A Basic result on the NBT is a serious red flag. Most universities will either decline admission to mainstream programmes or require enrolment in bridging/foundation courses before a degree programme begins. Some faculties won't consider applicants with a Basic result on any of the required tests, regardless of matric performance.
If you receive a Basic result, the most practical step is to re-sit the test after targeted preparation โ particularly in the area where you scored Basic. Our NBT practice tests can help identify which question types are dragging your score down. Many students improve from Basic to Intermediate or Proficient on a second sitting with focused prep.
Each university sets its own minimum NBT requirements per faculty. UCT, for example, uses the NBT as a mandatory component of its selection process across most faculties. Stellenbosch University requires AQL and MAT for science-stream programmes. UKZN and UJ use the NBT as a supplementary indicator but weigh it differently from UCT.
Always check the specific admissions requirements on the target university's website. Don't assume the same NBT result qualifies you for the same faculty at two different institutions โ it often doesn't. The NBT score report you receive from CETAP shows your scores and benchmarks, and you authorise release to specific universities through the CETAP portal.
The NBT isn't something you cram for the night before. The skills it tests โ academic reading, quantitative reasoning, and mathematical thinking โ develop over weeks of consistent practice. Here's what actually works.
For the Academic Literacy section, read widely. Newspapers, academic journal abstracts, and long-form magazine articles all build the close-reading speed the AL tests. The questions often ask about implied meaning, author tone, or the structure of an argument โ not just literal content. Practice tests that mirror the real AL question style are the most efficient preparation tool you have.
For Quantitative Literacy, practice data interpretation. Bar graphs, line graphs, pie charts, two-way tables, percentage change calculations โ these are the core QL formats. You don't need advanced maths for QL, but you do need to be comfortable extracting precise information quickly under time pressure. Practise with real-format questions so the QL style doesn't surprise you on test day.
For Mathematics (MAT), systematic revision is essential. Work through the key domains: algebra and functions, trigonometry, geometry and coordinate geometry, calculus basics, statistics, and probability. The MAT tests your ability to apply concepts to unfamiliar problems โ not just recall formulas. Our NBT mathematics practice questions and NBT algebra and functions quizzes cover the high-weight topics directly.
Timed practice matters. The AQL's 2-hour duration sounds manageable, but 125 questions in 120 minutes is tighter than it sounds when the passages are dense. Practise answering AL questions in under 30 seconds per question on average, and QL questions in similar time. Building that pace in practice takes the pressure off on test day.
The NBT practice tests on PracticeTestGeeks cover all three test types across hundreds of questions. Each quiz includes answers and explanations, so you're not just checking if you're right โ you're learning why the correct answer is correct, which is exactly the kind of analytical habit the real NBT rewards.
Plan your preparation timeline realistically. If your test date is six weeks away, spend the first two weeks on diagnosis โ work through a practice set in each section, identify where you're losing marks, and focus your remaining time on those specific areas. If you're scoring well in QL but struggling in AL, shift most of your study time to extended reading and inference exercises rather than spreading effort evenly. Targeted preparation consistently outperforms general revision.
Don't neglect test-day logistics. Students who arrive late, forget their ID, or sit down anxious from a last-minute rush tend to underperform regardless of preparation level. Know your venue, plan your route, bring water, and give yourself at least 30 minutes of buffer before the session starts. Small logistical details matter more than they seem when you're sitting a two-hour test.
For the Mathematics test specifically, calculator discipline matters. You're allowed a non-programmable scientific calculator, but over-reliance on it slows you down. Practise doing rough estimates in your head first โ this helps you identify wrong answer options quickly and skip unnecessary calculation steps. The MAT's three-hour duration feels long, but poorly-managed time leaves candidates rushing the final 15 questions. Build consistent pacing habits during practice so the real sitting feels routine.
Our NBT statistics and probability quizzes cover a domain that many students underestimate โ statistics and probability questions appear in both the QL and MAT, so practising them improves your score on two tests simultaneously. Work from weakness to strength, track your improvement across practice sets, and trust the process. Consistent, structured preparation is the single biggest predictor of NBT score improvement between sittings.