Explore the data: NAPLAN results for every primary and secondary school in Australia revealed
The 2025 NAPLAN results for 1.3 million students at 9000 schools are in – and we can reveal the top schools in each state and highest achievers in the nation.
The national NAPLAN results for more than 1.3 million students across the country are in, with the top schools in each state for 2025 finally revealed.
Nationally, 88.8 per cent of students in year three, five, seven and nine sat the annual aptitude test in March, with results from assessments in reading, writing, spelling, grammar and numeracy released on Wednesday. Here are the best performing schools in each state based on year 5 and year 9 averages, calculated exclusively by News Corp.
Interactive: Use the dropdown menus to switch to other states’ results, and the tabs to switch between primary and secondary results
New South Wales
Nationally, NSW schools topped the leaderboard in both primary and secondary categories.
The best primary school in the nation is exclusive private college Sydney Grammar, which attained a year 5 NAPLAN average score of 625.4, followed by Abbotsleigh on 608.8 and Beecroft Public School on 595.4. Despite occupying top spot nationally, Sydney Grammar’s results have slipped more than 15 points since 2024.
Several small independent schools in NSW had a remarkable year, with John Colet School in Belrose moving into the top 10 primary schools and Hurstville Adventist School and Greenacre Christian College entering the top 50.
MORE ANALYSIS OF NSW NAPLAN RESULTS HERE
In the secondary category, James Ruse Agricultural High School was the best in NSW and the highest-performing in the country, with a year 9 average score of 755.6. The school’s students posted a 20-point increase on their results from last year.
Next were Baulkham Hills High School with an average score of 724 and North Sydney Girls High School on 721.4.
Victoria
Melbourne’s four selective-entry high schools have maintained their position as the state’s best.
Melbourne High led the pack, with an average year 9 NAPLAN score of 717.8 – a 12.6-point improvement from 2024.
The state’s three other selective-entry schools, MacRobertson Girls High School (706.6), Nossal High (702.8) and Suzanne Cory High (696.4), rounded out the top four – all achieving average marks above 696.
Ballarat Clarendon College was the top private secondary school in the state with an average NAPLAN score of 669.4, and was also the top school at the primary level (590.2).
Other top primary performers included Presbyterian Ladies’ College (588.8), Haileybury College (588.4), Lighthouse Christian College Cranbourne (588.4) and St Andrews Christian College (587).
Meanwhile, outstanding state primary schools included Oakleigh South Primary (585.4), Wheelers Hill Primary (585.4), Beverley Hills Primary (579.2), Serpell Primary (572.4) and Canterbury Primary (571.8).
In the Geelong region, small-town Queenscliff Primary School outperformed Geelong’s most prestigious primary schools in NAPLAN rankings, taking out the region’s top spot, while Kardinia International College has defended its secondary school crown for the third consecutive year.
MORE ANALYSIS OF VICTORIAN NAPLAN RESULTS HERE
South Australia
All-girls schools have risen up the ranks in the latest results, with one of South Australia’s most prestigious female campuses snatching top spot among secondary students.
Wilderness School year 9 girls (639.4) have edged out previous leaders Southern Montessori School (616) and Glenunga International High School (632.6).
Other all-girls schools to feature in the top 20 secondary campuses include St Peter’s Collegiate Girls’ School (third), Seymour College (12th), Walford Anglican School for Girls (14th) and Loreto College (18th).
There is just one government school among the top 20 secondary schools (Glenunga International High School) and seven among the top 20 primary campuses.
MORE ANALYSIS OF SOUTH AUSTRALIAN NAPLAN RESULTS HERE
Queensland
Results were outstanding in the Sunshine State, with top-performing primary schools led by Sunnybank Hills State School with an average of 581.6, Citipointe Christian College (572.8) and Ipswich Grammar School (574.2).
Other high-achieving schools in Queensland are Whitsunday Anglican School with 550.6, Ormiston College at 552.6, and Matthew Flinders Anglican College at 549.4.
Top secondary performers are Queensland Academy for Science, Mathematics and Technology (706.6), Brisbane Girls Grammar School (659.8), Somerset College (635.4) and Ipswich Grammar School (633.4).
Rainworth State School was also among the stronger performing primary schools with an average of 541.
MORE ANALYSIS OF QUEENSLAND NAPLAN RESULTS HERE
Northern Territory
New NAPLAN data reveals a reshuffle of the Northern Territory’s top performing schools, with private providers outclassing government schools.
Topping the primary school ranking for the fourth consecutive year was Haileybury Rendall School.
The independent school’s year 5 cohort recorded an average score of 533.8.
Over-achieving Larrakeyah Primary School nudged into second spot, displacing other independent powerhouse The Essington School.
In secondary schooling, News Corp’s top-ranked NT private school The Essington School maintained top spot for the fourth year in a row. Haileybury placed second with eight of the top 10 secondary schools being private.
MORE ANALYSIS OF NORTHERN TERRITORY NAPLAN RESULTS HERE
Tasmania
New NAPLAN data for schools across the country released on Wednesday revealed two northern Tasmanian schools have taken top spot for average results in primary and secondary.
Launceston’s John Calvin School ranked first for its average year 5 results of 560.8, while Newstead Christian School topped the state for its average year 9 results of 627.2 in secondary.
Both schools are on the smaller side, with John Calvin School a combined K-10 private school boasting 112 students and Newstead Christian School another private school running from Prep to Year 10 with a total of 93 students.
MORE ANALYSIS OF TASMANIAN NAPLAN RESULTS HERE
More Coverage
Originally published as Explore the data: NAPLAN results for every primary and secondary school in Australia revealed