# OC Test Results 2026: Offers, Reserve Lists & Next Steps

> OC test results 2026, explained: when NSW outcomes arrive, how offers and reserve bands (A to E) work, and exactly what to do next for every result.

- URL: https://testacademy.com.au/blog/oc-test-results-2026-offers-reserve-lists-next-steps/
- Category: Guide
- Published: 2026-07-16
- Updated: 2026-07-16
- Reading time: 15 min
- Tags: oc test, opportunity class, 2026, oc results, oc reserve list

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If you're reading this with the application dashboard open in another tab, refreshing it every few hours, you're in good company. The wait for the OC outcome is one of the most nerve-racking weeks of Year 4. Here's what the result actually tells you, what each outcome means, and the exact next move for every scenario.OC test results 2026: the quick answerOC outcomes for Year 5 entry in 2027 are expected on 9 September 2026 (the NSW Department of Education's expected date). You'll get a message in your application dashboard and an email alerting you it's there.You'll see one of five outcomes: an offer, a reserve list only, an offer plus a higher-choice reserve, unsuccessful, or not applicable.There are no scores or ranks. A performance report places your child in one of four relative bands per section: top 10%, next 15%, next 25%, or lowest 50%.You can hold only one offer at first, and it always comes from the highest-preference school your child qualified for (you can list up to four).Reserve bands run A to E and estimate timing only. OC offers can keep coming from a reserve list until the end of Term 1 in Year 6.You cannot resit the OC test. If the result is unsuccessful, the Year 6 Selective High School test is the next real milestone.When the 2026 OC results land, and how you'll find outThe Department of Education's [expected date](https://education.nsw.gov.au/schooling/parents-and-carers/choosing-a-school-setting/selective-high-schools/outcomes) for opportunity class outcomes (Year 5 entry in 2027) is **9 September 2026**. For comparison, selective high school outcomes for Year 7 entry in 2027 are expected a few weeks earlier, on 19 August 2026. Treat 9 September as the planning date rather than a promise: the department confirms the exact release each year, and it can shift.You won't get a phone call or a letter. The Selective Education Team posts your outcome as a message in your online application dashboard and sends an email to alert you that it's there. To read it, log in, select the three dots under the ‘Action’ column, choose ‘View outcomes’, then open the ‘Student performance report’ to see how your child performed. If the email hasn't arrived, check your spam folder before assuming anything has gone wrong.How OC results actually work: bands, not scoresThe OC test has three sections: **Reading**, **Mathematical Reasoning** and **Thinking Skills**. There's no writing task (that's a Selective-only component). Each section carries equal weight toward the overall result.Here's the part that surprises most parents: the report doesn't give you a mark. Instead, for each section it shows one of four relative bands: the **top 10%** of candidates, the **next 15%**, the **next 25%**, or the **lowest 50%**. Those bands describe where your child sat compared with everyone else who took the test, not the percentage of questions they got right. Being in the lowest 50% for a section isn't a fail; by design, half of all candidates land there, and there's no pass mark on any section.The department also doesn't publish minimum entry scores, because the bar for each school shifts every year with how many children apply, how they perform, and how many places and later declines there are. So if you're hunting for “the OC cut-off for 2026”, there isn't an official one to find. One more thing worth knowing for this cohort: from the 2027 intake, every opportunity class offers an [equal number of places to girls and boys](https://www.nsw.gov.au/ministerial-releases/applications-to-open-for-2027-selective-school-entry-a-healthy-gender-balance-introduced), still fully on merit with no bonus points or score adjustments, and up to 20% of places at each OC are held for students facing educational disadvantage under the Equity Placement Model. These are two separate policies, and neither one changes anyone's test result.What to do next, by outcomeOpen the branch below that matches the wording in your dashboard. Each one is the plain-English version of the department's outcome categories, with the concrete next step spelled out.How the OC reserve list works (and how it differs from Selective)A reserve outcome means your child is on the wait-list for that school. If enough families ahead of you decline their offers, your child's position can be reached and an offer made. Alongside the reserve outcome, the dashboard shows a reserve band, A to E, that estimates the timing based on how offers moved at that school last year.Reserve bandWhat it estimates (based on last year's declines)Band AAn offer is likely within 1 month of the outcome notification.Band BAn offer is likely within 2 months.Band CAn offer is likely within 3 months.Band DAn offer is possible after 3 months, if a place opens up.Band EAn offer is unlikely.OC reserve bands A to E (Department of Education estimates)The bands are genuinely just estimates. As the [Department of Education explains](https://education.nsw.gov.au/schooling/parents-and-carers/choosing-a-school-setting/selective-high-schools/outcomes/opportunity-class-reserve-list-bands), they're built from last year's decline patterns and there is no guarantee of an offer, even in Band A. The one number that reassures anxious parents most: if you have no accepted offer, your child can stay on a reserve list right up until the **end of Term 1 in Year 6**. Offers keep trickling out across that whole window as places open up.This is where OC differs from Selective, and it trips people up. An opportunity class is a two-year placement for Years 5 and 6, so its reserve window stretches into Year 6. A selective high school reserve, by contrast, runs only until the end of Term 1 of the entry year (Year 7), and uses six bands, A to F. Same idea, different timelines. Opportunity ClassSelective High SchoolWhat it's forYear 5 entry (a two-year OC placement for Years 5 and 6)Year 7 entryTest sectionsReading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking SkillsReading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills and a typed Writing taskReserve bandsBands A to EBands A to FHow long reserve offers keep comingUntil the end of Term 1 in Year 6Until the end of Term 1 of the entry year (Year 7)OC vs Selective: how the reserve mechanics differYou've got an offer: accepting, and what happens to your current schoolAn offer only ever comes from a single school: the highest preference on your list that your child qualified for. If they cleared the bar for two of your choices, you'll only see the higher one, and the lower choice shows as ‘not applicable’. That's not a rejection; it just means a better-ranked option came through.Log in and select **Accept** or **Decline** before the response due date. Miss it and you lose the place. You're allowed to accept now and change your mind later, but the reverse doesn't work: once you decline an offer, you can't get it back. If you accept, the OC school will contact you about enrolment and orientation days; enrolment can't be deferred. And if the opportunity class is at a different school from your child's current one, accepting means moving there for Years 5 and 6. Decline everything, or receive no offer, and your child simply stays where they are.If it's unsuccessful: why this isn't the end of the roadFirst, some perspective that helps on a hard day: only about **one in eight** children who sit the OC test are offered a place. An unsuccessful outcome is the most common result by a wide margin, and it says far more about how few OC seats exist than about your child.The most important thing to be clear on is that you **cannot resit the OC test**. It's a one-off, sat in Year 4 for a placement that runs across Years 5 and 6. The next comparable milestone is the [Selective High School Placement Test in Year 6](https://testacademy.com.au/blog/2026-nsw-selective-high-school-placement-test-everything-parents-should-know), for entry into Year 7. It's a separate test with a separate application, and an OC result, good or bad, carries no weight in it. Children who miss OC routinely go on to selective offers; the door is wide open.An appeal is possible but narrow. The department only considers appeals on grounds like a documented illness or misadventure that affected test day; disappointment at the result, young age, or lack of preparation are all explicitly invalid grounds, and no appeal will ever produce a score or rank. For most families, the more useful move is simply to keep the reasoning habits ticking over. The Selective test leans on the same core skills the OC test did, so a child who keeps reading widely and doing a little timed problem-solving is already building toward it. That two-year runway is exactly what a structured program like [Selective Mastery](https://testacademy.com.au/courses/selective-mastery/) is built around, for the capable Year 5 who was close but not placed.Thinking ahead: a younger sibling, or next year's cohortIf you have a Year 3 at home who’ll sit the OC test next year, the single best thing you can do now is unglamorous: build steady reading and one consistent maths habit, then add exam-specific practice closer to the test rather than cramming at the end. That gradual build is the shape of [OC Mastery](https://testacademy.com.au/courses/oc-mastery/), which runs from Year 3 alongside broader foundations rather than replacing them. Whatever route you take, familiarity with the on-screen format and real per-section timing is what lets a capable child actually show what they know on the day.OC results, answeredWhen exactly are the 2026 OC results released?The Department of Education's expected date for OC outcomes (Year 5 entry in 2027) is 9 September 2026. It's an expected date, so check your application dashboard and the official Outcomes page for the confirmed release; you'll also get an email alert when your outcome is ready to view.Can I find out my child's OC test score or rank?No. The department stopped releasing scores and placement ranks. Your performance report only shows which of four bands your child fell into for each section, compared with everyone who sat the test. It does not show the percentage of questions answered correctly.What does an OC reserve band actually mean?It's a timing estimate based on how many families declined offers at that school last year. Band A suggests an offer within about a month, Band B within two, Band C within three, Band D after three months, and Band E means an offer is unlikely. Bands are estimates, not guarantees.Can my child resit the OC test?No. The OC test is sat once, in Year 4, for entry into an opportunity class in Years 5 and 6. There's no resit. The next comparable opportunity is the Selective High School test in Year 6, for Year 7 entry.Does missing out on OC hurt my child's Selective chances?No. They are separate tests with separate applications, and an OC result carries no weight in Selective placement. Plenty of children who don't get an OC place go on to receive a selective high school offer two years later.How long can we stay on an OC reserve list?If you have no accepted offer, your child can remain on a reserve list and be placed up until the end of Term 1 in Year 6. Once you accept an offer, the reserve decision date governs whether you keep any higher-choice reserve spots.Whatever your dashboard says on 9 September, the result is one data point on a long road, not a verdict. If it's an offer, celebrate and enrol. If it's a reserve, line up a strong back-up and wait it out. If it's unsuccessful, aim the same energy at the Year 6 Selective test. For the fuller picture of the test itself, our [complete OC placement test guide](https://testacademy.com.au/blog/2026-nsw-opportunity-class-oc-placement-test-everything-parents-should-know) and the rundown of [what changed for Selective and OC from 2025](https://testacademy.com.au/blog/major-changes-to-selective-and-oc-tests-from-2025) are both worth a read.
