NECO Grading System Explained: Understanding what A1, B2, C6, D7, E8, and F9 mean is important for every student preparing for university admission in Nigeria. The National Examinations Council (NECO) uses a grading system to measure candidates’ academic performance across subjects. Grades such as A1 indicate excellent performance, while B2 and C6 represent strong and acceptable passes for most admission requirements. D7 and E8 are lower passes and may not meet university entry standards, while F9 means failure in a subject. Knowing how NECO grades affect admission can help candidates plan better.
Quick answer:
| Grade | Score Range | Classification | Counts as Credit? |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | 75 – 100% | Excellent | ✅ Yes |
| B2 | 70 – 74% | Very Good | ✅ Yes |
| B3 | 65 – 69% | Good | ✅ Yes |
| C4 | 60 – 64% | Credit | ✅ Yes |
| C5 | 55 – 59% | Credit | ✅ Yes |
| C6 | 50 – 54% | Credit | ✅ Yes |
| D7 | 45 – 49% | Pass | ❌ No |
| E8 | 40 – 44% | Pass | ❌ No |
| F9 | 0 – 39% | Fail | ❌ No |
The full breakdown what each grade means, which grades count for university admission, how practical marks are combined with theory, and what to do if you fall short is below.
Table of Contents
Key Highlights
- Credit threshold: C6 (50–54%) is the minimum grade that counts as a credit pass
- University admission standard: Five credits at C6 or above, including English Language and Mathematics
- D7 and E8: These are passes the exam was not failed, but they do not count as credits for admission
- F9: Fail the subject must be re-sat to meet admission requirements
- Practical subjects: Practical component counts 25–40% of total score; both paper and practical must be sat
- NECO and WAEC: Both use the same A1–F9 scale and are equally accepted by JAMB
About NECO
The National Examinations Council (NECO) was established in 1999 and is headquartered in Minna, Niger State. It conducts the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) Internal every June/July for school candidates, and the SSCE External (GCE) in November/December for private candidates. NECO results are accepted by all Nigerian universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education on equal terms with WAEC.
The NECO Grading Scale in Full
NECO uses a nine-point grading system. Each grade corresponds to a specific percentage band and carries a classification that determines how it is treated for admission purposes.
| Grade | Score Range | Classification | Admission Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | 75 – 100% | Excellent | Credit — strongest profile |
| B2 | 70 – 74% | Very Good | Credit — competitive |
| B3 | 65 – 69% | Good | Credit — solid |
| C4 | 60 – 64% | Credit | Credit — acceptable |
| C5 | 55 – 59% | Credit | Credit — acceptable |
| C6 | 50 – 54% | Credit | Credit — minimum for admission |
| D7 | 45 – 49% | Pass | Not a credit — does not qualify |
| E8 | 40 – 44% | Pass | Not a credit — does not qualify |
| F9 | 0 – 39% | Fail | Fail — must re-sit |
The critical line sits between C6 and D7. A C6 counts toward the five credits required for university admission. A D7 does not even though it is technically a pass, universities do not accept it as a credit. Many candidates have lost an admission cycle because they assumed a D7 in Mathematics or English was sufficient. It is not.
What “Five Credits” Actually Means
Nigerian universities require a minimum of five credit passes (C6 or above) in the SSCE at not more than two sittings. Two of those five credits must be English Language and Mathematics, regardless of course.
This means:
- A D7 in English does not meet the requirement, even with five other credits
- An E8 in Mathematics blocks admission to virtually every degree programme
- The remaining three credits must include subjects relevant to your chosen course (for example, Biology, Chemistry, and Physics for Medicine)
Two sittings: If you did not obtain all five credits in one year, you can combine results from two different exam sittings for example, your 2026 NECO result and a 2025 WAEC result. Most universities accept this. A small number of competitive programmes (and a few private universities) require all five credits in one sitting always check the specific institution’s admission requirements.
How NECO Calculates Your Score
Written papers
Most NECO subjects have two written components:
- Paper II (Essay/Theory): Tests depth of knowledge and written ability
- Paper III (Objective): Multiple-choice questions testing breadth of knowledge
The two papers are combined to produce a single percentage, which is then converted to the A1–F9 grade.
Practical subjects
For Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Agricultural Science, Computer Studies, and vocational subjects, a practical component is added:
- Practical contributes 25–40% of the total score, depending on the subject
- The written papers contribute the remaining 60–75%
- Both components are combined before the grade is assigned
A candidate who sits only the written papers and misses the practical will not receive a result for that subject. The practical is not optional for subjects that carry one.
How grades appear on your result slip
Your NECO result slip shows:
- A grade for each subject (e.g., B3)
- The total score (percentage) for each subject
- Your examination number
- Whether you sat as an Internal or External candidate
The grade — not the raw percentage — is what appears on your certificate and what universities, JAMB, and employers use.
How NECO Grades Affect University Admission
The five-credit rule and JAMB
To buy a JAMB form for a degree programme, you must already have (or be sitting the examination that could produce) five credits including English and Mathematics. JAMB screens O’Level results at the point of admission through the CAPS portal. A result that does not meet the five-credit standard will block the admission offer.
Grades and course eligibility
Different courses carry different O’Level requirements beyond the English and Mathematics baseline:
| Course Category | Typical Additional Credits Required |
|---|---|
| Medicine / Dentistry / Pharmacy | Biology, Chemistry, Physics |
| Engineering / Technology | Mathematics (strong), Physics, Chemistry |
| Law | Literature in English or Government (some schools) |
| Accounting / Business | Mathematics, Economics |
| Nursing / Medical Laboratory | Biology, Chemistry, Physics |
| Education | Depends on teaching subject combination |
| Arts / Humanities | Literature, Government, History, or Language subjects |
Always confirm the exact requirements for your target school and course on the institution’s official website or the JAMB brochure.
Competitive programmes and grade strength
Five C6s may clear the minimum bar, but they will not make you competitive for high-demand programmes. Medicine at UNILAG, Law at UI, or Computer Engineering at Covenant University attract thousands of applicants, and admission officers look at the full O’Level profile not just whether you crossed the credit line.
A result with multiple A1s and B2s gives you more room for negotiation if your JAMB score or Post UTME score is not as strong as you hoped. The reverse also holds: a very high JAMB score with weak O’Level grades creates friction at the CAPS stage.
NECO vs WAEC: Same Scale, Same Weight
Both NECO and WAEC use the identical A1–F9 grading scale with the same percentage bands. JAMB accepts both equally. Nigerian universities accept both equally. There is no admissions advantage to holding a WAEC result over a NECO result, or vice versa.
The practical difference for candidates sitting both in the same year:
- WAEC results are typically released in August–September
- NECO results are typically released in September–October
- Both can be combined into a two-sitting result for admission purposes if needed
What to Do If You Did Not Get the Grades You Need
D7 or E8 in a required subject: The subject does not count as a credit. Options are the NECO GCE (November/December sitting) or the next WAEC (May/June), whichever comes first. You can combine the new result with your existing credits to meet the five-credit requirement in two sittings.
F9 in a required subject: Same options apply. An F9 must be replaced it cannot be supplemented.
Only four credits: One more credit in any of the five required subjects resolves this. Identify the subject where you came closest (a D7 or strong E8) and focus preparation there.
All five credits but wrong subjects: Some candidates have five credits but not in the subjects required for their target course. A re-sit targeting the missing subject is the most direct solution. Also consider whether a course change or institution change resolves the gap without a re-sit.
Comparison Table: NECO Grade Points (Used by Some Universities for Aggregate Scoring)
A small number of universities factor O’Level grades directly into aggregate score calculations. When they do, grades are typically converted to points as follows:
| Grade | Points |
|---|---|
| A1 | 8 |
| B2 | 7 |
| B3 | 6 |
| C4 | 5 |
| C5 | 4 |
| C6 | 3 |
| D7 | 2 |
| E8 | 1 |
| F9 | 0 |
The five most relevant subjects are used and the points are added to a converted JAMB score and Post UTME score to produce the final aggregate. Where this method applies, the difference between B3 and C6 across five subjects is 15 points — which can be decisive in a competitive admission round.
Frequently Asked Questions NECO Grading System
What is the minimum grade to pass NECO?
Any grade from A1 to E8 is technically a pass the candidate sat and scored enough not to fail. However, only grades C6 and above count as credit passes for university admission purposes. D7 and E8 are passes that do not open admission doors.
What does C6 mean in NECO?
C6 is a Credit grade, awarded for a score between 50 and 54 percent. It is the minimum grade that counts as a credit pass and satisfies the O’Level requirement for university, polytechnic, and college of education admission in Nigeria.
Is D7 a pass or a fail in NECO?
D7 is a pass the candidate has not failed the subject. However, it does not count as a credit. For JAMB admission purposes and university screening, D7 is treated the same as a fail because it does not meet the five-credit standard.
How many credits do I need for university admission in Nigeria?
You need a minimum of five credits (C6 or above) in the SSCE, including English Language and Mathematics, obtained in not more than two sittings. Three of the remaining credits must be in subjects relevant to your chosen degree programme.
Is NECO accepted by all universities in Nigeria?
Yes. NECO SSCE results both Internal (June/July) and External/GCE (November/December) are accepted by all federal, state, and private universities in Nigeria. JAMB accepts NECO results on equal terms with WAEC.
Can I combine NECO and WAEC results for admission?
Yes. Most Nigerian universities accept a combination of results from two different sittings, for example a 2026 NECO result combined with a 2025 WAEC result. A small number of highly competitive programmes require all five credits in one sitting always verify the specific institution’s policy.
What is the difference between NECO and WAEC grading?
There is no difference. Both examinations use the identical A1–F9 nine-point scale with the same percentage bands: A1 (75–100%), B2 (70–74%), B3 (65–69%), C4 (60–64%), C5 (55–59%), C6 (50–54%), D7 (45–49%), E8 (40–44%), F9 (0–39%).
If I fail NECO, can I re-sit specific subjects?
Yes. You can register for the NECO GCE (External) sitting in November/December to re-sit individual subjects without repeating the full examination. You do not need to re-sit subjects you have already passed.
Final Thoughts
The NECO grading system uses nine grades from A1 (Excellent, 75–100%) down to F9 (Fail, 0–39%). The single most important line in the scale is between C6 and D7: everything C6 and above counts as a credit pass toward the five credits required for Nigerian university admission. D7 and E8 are passes, but they do not count.
Before your results are released, identify the subjects where you sat, check your practical was recorded, and know which subjects you need credits in for your target course. When results are available, verify them on the official NECO portal at results.neco.gov.ng.
Source: NECO A1–F9 grading scale sourced from the National Examinations Council’s official marking scheme and confirmed across NECO official publications. JAMB O’Level credit requirements sourced from the JAMB admissions policy applicable for the 2026/2027 academic session.
⚠️ Disclaimer: Grading information is based on the official NECO scale as published. University-specific admission requirements vary always confirm the precise O’Level subject and grade requirements directly with your target institution before applying. CampusNinja is not affiliated with NECO or JAMB.