Legal Studies
Legal Studies is about justice and rights — and learning to argue both sides of an issue.
Reading and writing heavy, with lots of current examples to keep fresh.
Keeping legislation and cases current, and arguing evaluatively.
This is the spread of scaled marks across everyone who took the subject — not how hard it is. A high mean usually means a strong cohort sat it. The figures are from UAC’s latest scaling report (2025), with the year-by-year trend above.
Where might my mark scale to?
Set the HSC mark you’re aiming for. We’ll show a band of where that tends to scale — never a single number, never a prediction.
Your course mark, out of 100 — a 2-unit course.
How does HSC Legal Studies scale?
In the UAC Preliminary Report on the Scaling of the 2025 NSW HSC, Legal Studies had a scaled mean of 25.3 out of 50 per unit, and its scaled mean has been very stable over recent years. Scaling reflects how academically strong the cohort is — not how hard the subject is — and there is no exact HSC-to-scaled conversion, so it's best read as a range, never a single number.
How hard is HSC Legal Studies, and how much work is it?
Legal Studies is moderate effort — typically 3–4 hrs/wk. Reading and writing heavy, with lots of current examples to keep fresh. Where students most often struggle: Keeping legislation and cases current, and arguing evaluatively.
What does HSC Legal Studies build?
Legal Studies is about justice and rights — and learning to argue both sides of an issue. It especially develops argument & persuasion, writing & expression, and independent research.
Who should take HSC Legal Studies?
Students who like debate, justice and the real-world stakes of law. It may be more of a grind for students who dislike sustained reading and essay writing.
Where’s this data from?
Scaling figures are from the UAC Preliminary Report on the Scaling of the 2025 NSW HSC (Tables A1, A3). Scaled marks are out of 50 per unit.
There is no exact HSC-to-scaled conversion — for any one HSC mark there is a range of scaled marks, which is why we only ever show a band.
The skills, effort and “who it suits” notes are Intuition Education’s editorial guidance, not UAC data.
Why we don’t do an ATAR calculator →