Choosing a Melbourne public school comes down to three questions: which selective-entry schools your child is eligible for, what your local school zone looks like, and how the school's culture fits your family. Public schools in Melbourne can rival Victoria’s most expensive private schools on academic results — but only if you understand the system before you enrol.
This guide walks through Melbourne’s top 15 public schools, the four selective-entry high schools that take students from anywhere in the state, how Victorian school zoning actually works, and what to do if your zoned school isn’t the right fit. Updated May 2026.
Quick answer
Melbourne’s strongest public schools fall into two groups. The four selective-entry high schools — Mac.Robertson Girls’ High, Melbourne High, Nossal High, and Suzanne Cory High — admit Year 9–12 students from anywhere in Victoria via a single state-wide test, and consistently produce VCE medians above 35. The leading zoned public schools — Glen Waverley Secondary, Balwyn High, McKinnon Secondary, Box Hill High, Williamstown High, John Monash Science School (selective Year 10–12), Princes Hill Secondary, Brighton Secondary — require you to live inside their designated zone, which you can check on Find My School. Strong primary feeders matter at every Year 7 transition, so start the conversation in Year 5 if zoning matters to you.

What are the best public schools in Melbourne?
Melbourne’s top public schools split cleanly into selective-entry (entry by state-wide test, no zoning) and zoned high-performers (entry by address). Both groups regularly outperform many private schools on VCE results — the difference is how you get in. Below are the 15 schools that consistently rank highest on VCE median and value-add, with the entry pathway noted for each. Selective-entry schools are open to any Victorian student who passes the test; zoned schools are open only if your home address falls inside the school’s catchment on Find My School.
Mac.Robertson Girls’ High School (selective entry)
Mac.Robertson Girls’ High School is one of Australia’s top academic schools and Victoria’s only selective-entry school for girls in Years 9–12. Located in South Melbourne, “Mac.Rob” consistently produces median VCE study scores in the high-30s and a long tail of 99.95 ATARs each year. Entry is by the single state-wide selective-entry test taken in Year 8. Strong all-round culture — debating, music, public speaking, leadership programs — and a tight Year 9 cohort that is academically ahead of the typical Victorian Year 9.
Melbourne High School (selective entry)
Melbourne High School in South Yarra is the boys’ counterpart to Mac.Rob, also Years 9–12 by selective-entry test. MHS regularly sits in the top three Victorian schools by VCE median and ATAR distribution, with particularly strong outcomes in maths, sciences, and humanities. Entry is via the same Year 8 state-wide test. Famous for rowing, cadets, music, and an unusually strong alumni network. The cohort is academically self-selecting, which lifts every classroom.
Nossal High School (selective entry)
Nossal High School in Berwick is co-educational selective entry for Years 9–12, sitting on a Monash University campus — students get exposure to university facilities and academics from Year 9. Strong STEM emphasis, consistent VCE medians in the high-30s, and the city’s southeast intake means it’s often the top option for academically-strong students in the southeast growth corridor (Berwick, Cranbourne, Pakenham, Narre Warren).
Suzanne Cory High School (selective entry)
Suzanne Cory High School in Werribee is the fourth selective-entry school, co-educational for Years 9–12, serving Melbourne’s western growth corridor. VCE medians sit in the mid-to-high 30s with strong outcomes in maths, biology, and chemistry. The most accessible selective school for families in Werribee, Point Cook, Tarneit, Hoppers Crossing, and Wyndham Vale. Same Year 8 state-wide test for entry.
John Monash Science School (selective entry, Year 10–12)
John Monash Science School in Clayton is a specialist STEM school co-located on Monash University’s Clayton campus. It’s a Year 10–12 only school (different from the four Year 9–12 selective schools above) with its own application process — you apply in Year 9 with a written application, references, and an interview rather than a single state-wide test. Outstanding outcomes in physics, chemistry, biology, and specialist maths; access to university research labs and Monash academics is a real differentiator.
Glen Waverley Secondary College (zoned)
Glen Waverley Secondary College in the eastern suburbs is one of the strongest co-ed zoned schools in Victoria. Years 7–12, with VCE medians regularly in the mid-30s and a deep accelerated learning program. The zone covers most of Glen Waverley and parts of Mount Waverley and Wheelers Hill — check the exact streets on Find My School. The Glen Waverley name has driven a real-estate premium in the zone for two decades.
Balwyn High School (zoned)
Balwyn High School covers the inner-eastern Balwyn / Balwyn North zone for Years 7–12. Strong VCE medians, a sizeable accelerated learning stream, and a long-running international-student program that broadens the cohort. Particularly known for languages (Chinese, Japanese, French) and music. Like Glen Waverley, Balwyn’s zone has shaped property prices for years.
McKinnon Secondary College (zoned)
McKinnon Secondary College in the bayside southeast (McKinnon, Bentleigh, Ormond) consistently posts top-tier VCE medians among zoned schools, with particularly strong music, performing arts, and sport programs. Years 7–12. The zone is small and tightly drawn — the McKinnon zone has been one of the most-searched school zones in Melbourne real-estate listings for the past decade.
Box Hill High School (zoned + selective stream)
Box Hill High School in the eastern suburbs runs an accelerated learning program (selective entry from Year 7 by school-administered test) alongside its zoned Year 7–12 cohort. Strong outcomes in maths and sciences, particularly through the accelerated stream. The zone covers parts of Box Hill, Box Hill South, and Mont Albert; check Find My School for street-level boundaries.
Williamstown High School (zoned)
Williamstown High School in Melbourne’s inner west serves Williamstown, Newport, and parts of Yarraville and Spotswood. Years 7–12 with two campuses (junior at Pasco Street, senior at Bayview Street). Solid VCE results, strong sailing and rowing programs given the bayside location, and a sustainability-focused curriculum. The zone is the natural choice for inner-western families who don’t want to drive across town.
Princes Hill Secondary College (zoned)
Princes Hill Secondary College in inner-north Carlton North serves Carlton, Carlton North, Princes Hill, Fitzroy North, and parts of Brunswick. A small, progressive, arts-strong school with a distinct culture — project-based learning, strong drama and visual arts, and a left-leaning inner-city cohort. VCE medians are solid; this school is chosen as much for fit as for results.
Brighton Secondary College (zoned)
Brighton Secondary College in the bayside southeast covers Brighton, Brighton East, and parts of Hampton and Caulfield South. Years 7–12 with a Sports Academy program (sport-specific training pathways alongside a normal academic load) and strong VCE outcomes. The zone is small and Brighton property prices reflect it.
Mount Waverley Secondary College (zoned)
Mount Waverley Secondary College serves Mount Waverley and parts of Glen Waverley and Pinewood. Years 7–12 across two campuses, strong VCE medians, and a substantial international and overseas-trained-teacher community that gives the school a global feel. Often a strong second choice for southeastern families just outside the Glen Waverley zone.
University High School (zoned)
University High School in Parkville covers parts of Carlton, Parkville, Kensington, North Melbourne, and Flemington. Years 7–12, with a long-running selective Elizabeth Blackburn Sciences program (entry from Year 10 by application) co-delivered with the University of Melbourne. The general zoned cohort is academically diverse; the school’s inner-city location and proximity to the University of Melbourne make it culturally distinctive.
Albert Park College (zoned)
Albert Park College in inner-bayside Albert Park serves Albert Park, Middle Park, Port Melbourne, South Melbourne, and St Kilda. Opened in 2011 and has grown a strong reputation quickly — particularly in the visual arts, music, and design technologies. Modern facilities, small Year 7 intake, and a strong inner-suburb parent community. The zone is small.
How does Melbourne school zoning actually work?
Every Victorian government school has a designated “zone” or catchment, and your child is automatically guaranteed a place at the school whose zone covers your home address. The Victorian Department of Education sets these zones; you can look up your address on the official Find My School portal, which will return your zoned primary school and your zoned secondary school instantly. Zones are based on your permanent residential address — the address on your driver’s licence, lease, or rates notice — not where you happen to be living temporarily. Zones can shift year to year as enrolments change, particularly in the southeast and inner-north growth corridors, so re-check the year your child is due to enrol rather than relying on what you saw three years ago.
How do I find my Melbourne school zone?
Use the official Victorian Department of Education tool at findmyschool.vic.gov.au. Type your address, hit search, and the map returns your zoned primary and secondary schools with the boundary outlined. Two things to watch: (1) zones for the following school year are usually published in October — if you’re moving house specifically for a school zone, check the boundary for the year your child will start, not the current year; and (2) some streets sit on zone borders, in which case Find My School will show you the precise side-of-the-street boundary. If you’re buying a property primarily for a specific school zone, get the zone confirmed in writing by the school before settlement — agents have been known to misquote.
What are the top selective public schools in Melbourne?
Victoria has four full-academic selective-entry high schools open to students from anywhere in the state — Mac.Robertson Girls’ High, Melbourne High, Nossal High, and Suzanne Cory High — plus John Monash Science School (Year 10–12, separate application). All four Year 9–12 schools admit students through a single combined entrance test taken in Year 8 (the “Year 9 entry test”), with one application form covering all four schools. Mac.Rob is single-sex girls; Melbourne High is single-sex boys; Nossal and Suzanne Cory are co-educational. Several zoned schools also run their own internal selective streams (Box Hill High’s accelerated learning program, University High’s Elizabeth Blackburn Sciences, Albert Park College’s art and design pathways) — these run inside a normal zoned school, with entry by school-administered test or application.
How do I get my child into Mac.Robertson Girls’ or Melbourne High?
Sit the Year 9 selective-entry test, which is administered each year in mid-June for Year 8 students applying for Year 9 entry the following year. Registrations open in February through the Victorian Department of Education’s parents portal. The test covers reading comprehension, mathematics, and writing — a single combined exam — and one application form lists your school preferences across all four Year 9–12 selective schools. Cut-offs vary by year and by school: Mac.Rob and Melbourne High are typically the most competitive, Suzanne Cory and Nossal slightly less. Test prep matters — familiarity with the question style and timing is the single biggest predictor of performance — so most families start serious preparation in Year 7 or early Year 8. A good Melbourne tutor can run weekly practice tests against the official format; we charge A$65/hr flat for selective-entry preparation (no premium for selective coaching, no contracts, just per-lesson billing).

Are public schools in Melbourne as good as private?
For academic outcomes, the strongest Melbourne public schools match or beat most private schools. The four selective-entry schools (Mac.Rob, MHS, Nossal, Suzanne Cory) plus John Monash Science School have produced VCE medians and 99.95 ATAR counts on par with Scotch College, Melbourne Grammar, MLC, and Carey Baptist for years — and at $0 in fees instead of A$35,000–A$45,000 a year. Top zoned schools (Glen Waverley, Balwyn, McKinnon, Box Hill, Mount Waverley) sit in the same band on academic results. Where private schools differentiate is breadth of co-curriculars (the rowing programs, the campus boarding houses, the international study tours), pastoral structure (smaller pastoral groups, dedicated chaplains and counsellors), and network effects (the alumni hiring pipelines and the social capital of an old-school tie). Whether those things are worth A$500,000 across Years 7–12 depends on what your family wants — not on the academic results, which the top public schools can match.
What’s the difference between zoned, selective, and academic-stream public schools?
Three distinct entry pathways operate inside Victoria’s government school system, and they often confuse new families. Zoned schools enrol students whose permanent address falls inside the school’s designated catchment on Find My School — entry is automatic and free, no test required. Fully selective-entry schools (the four Year 9–12 schools, plus Year 10–12 John Monash Science School) admit students from anywhere in Victoria via a state-wide test — address is irrelevant, only the test result matters. Academic-stream schools (Box Hill High, University High, Princes Hill, Albert Park College and others) are zoned schools that run an internal accelerated or selective stream alongside their normal cohort — you usually need to live in the zone and pass a school-run test or application to access the stream. The third category is the most often misunderstood: a parent will hear “Box Hill High has a selective program” and assume the whole school is selective, when in fact the bulk of students enter through the zone in Year 7 alongside a smaller selective Year 7 stream.
Which Melbourne suburbs have the best public schools?
Melbourne’s strongest public-school zones cluster in five regions. The eastern suburbs (Glen Waverley, Mount Waverley, Balwyn, Box Hill, Camberwell) hold the deepest concentration of top zoned high schools and the most established real-estate premiums. The bayside southeast (Brighton, McKinnon, Caulfield, Bentleigh) combines Brighton Secondary, McKinnon Secondary, and a strong primary feeder network. The inner north (Carlton, Princes Hill, Fitzroy North, Brunswick) is the Princes Hill Secondary catchment plus University High’s Parkville zone. The inner west (Williamstown, Newport, Yarraville) sits inside the Williamstown High zone with strong primary feeders. The southeast growth corridor (Berwick, Cranbourne, Narre Warren) is increasingly attractive because Nossal High sits inside it, opening selective-entry as a real option without a long commute. If selective-entry isn’t in play and you’re zone-shopping, your task is to balance house prices against zone strength and primary feeders.
How do I enrol my child in a Melbourne public school?
For Year 7 entry, the process runs almost a full year ahead. Most Year 6 students apply through their primary school in April–May of Year 6 using the “Year 6 to 7 transition” form, distributed by the Year 6 teacher. Your child is offered a place at your zoned secondary school by default. You can apply for a non-zoned school as well, but those places only open up if the school has capacity after all zoned applicants are placed — high-demand schools (Glen Waverley, McKinnon, Balwyn) almost never have capacity. Selective-entry applications open separately in February for the test in mid-June, with offers in September. For mid-year transfers or moves, contact the receiving school directly with proof of address (lease or rates notice). For primary school entry, applications open the year before kindergarten transition, with most schools running open days in March–May. The Department of Education’s parents portal is the official source.
What if my zoned school isn’t the right fit?
Three real options, in order of practicality. One: apply to a non-zoned public school. You can list a preferred school outside your zone on the enrolment form; if the school has capacity after all zoned applicants are placed, you may be offered a place. High-demand schools rarely have capacity. Two: target a selective-entry school. If your child is in Year 7 or Year 8, the selective-entry test in Year 8 opens up Mac.Rob, MHS, Nossal, or Suzanne Cory regardless of where you live — this is the single biggest unlock for families in average zones. Three: change your address. Many Melbourne families do move house specifically for a school zone, particularly into Glen Waverley, Balwyn, McKinnon, or Williamstown. If you’re considering this, get the zone confirmed in writing by the school before you sign a lease or contract — agents do misquote, and zones do shift. Read more on when changing schools is worth it.
How do I support my child academically once they’ve started?
The strongest signals that your child is thriving in their school come from three places: end-of-semester grades trending up across multiple subjects, your child willingly talking about lessons and teachers at home, and homework getting done without major battles. If any of those three is missing, intervene early — gaps in Years 7–9 compound into Years 10–12. The most common interventions Melbourne parents use are a weekly Melbourne tutor in the weakest subject (typically maths or English), a peer study group through the school, or a deliberate change of subject mix in Year 10. Tutero charges A$65/hr flat across primary, lower-secondary and senior years — same rate whether your child is in Year 5 or Year 12, no premium for selective-entry coaching, no contracts. When’s the right time to start tutoring? – usually as soon as you spot the early signs.
Related reading
- Top private schools in Melbourne: the companion sister-article covering Melbourne’s 15 leading private schools, fees, scholarships and entry timelines.
- How to find a quality tutor in Melbourne: what to look for, what to ask, and how Melbourne tutoring is priced.
- How to get a scholarship in Melbourne: private-school scholarships and academic bursaries explained.
- What every Melbourne parent should know about primary & high school: the wider Victorian-system primer.
- Proven strategies for acing your VCE exams: for once your child is in senior school.
- 4 reasons to consider changing your child’s school.
- Choosing the right school in 6 steps.
Bottom line
Melbourne’s public-school system is two systems stacked on top of each other: a state-wide selective-entry system that competes with the best private schools at $0 in fees, and a zoned system where your address determines your school. Use Find My School to confirm your zone in the year your child enrols, sit the selective-entry test in Year 8 if your child is academically strong, and start the conversation with your Year 6 primary teacher early. If your child needs targeted support — for selective-entry test prep, VCE subjects, or just confidence after a tough term — a Melbourne tutor at A$65/hr can fit alongside any school choice you make.
Victoria has four selective-entry public schools open to any student in the state — and they match the academic results of any private school in Melbourne, at $0 in fees.
Victoria has four selective-entry public schools open to any student in the state — and they match the academic results of any private school in Melbourne, at $0 in fees.
Choosing a Melbourne public school comes down to three questions: which selective-entry schools your child is eligible for, what your local school zone looks like, and how the school's culture fits your family. Public schools in Melbourne can rival Victoria’s most expensive private schools on academic results — but only if you understand the system before you enrol.
This guide walks through Melbourne’s top 15 public schools, the four selective-entry high schools that take students from anywhere in the state, how Victorian school zoning actually works, and what to do if your zoned school isn’t the right fit. Updated May 2026.
Quick answer
Melbourne’s strongest public schools fall into two groups. The four selective-entry high schools — Mac.Robertson Girls’ High, Melbourne High, Nossal High, and Suzanne Cory High — admit Year 9–12 students from anywhere in Victoria via a single state-wide test, and consistently produce VCE medians above 35. The leading zoned public schools — Glen Waverley Secondary, Balwyn High, McKinnon Secondary, Box Hill High, Williamstown High, John Monash Science School (selective Year 10–12), Princes Hill Secondary, Brighton Secondary — require you to live inside their designated zone, which you can check on Find My School. Strong primary feeders matter at every Year 7 transition, so start the conversation in Year 5 if zoning matters to you.

What are the best public schools in Melbourne?
Melbourne’s top public schools split cleanly into selective-entry (entry by state-wide test, no zoning) and zoned high-performers (entry by address). Both groups regularly outperform many private schools on VCE results — the difference is how you get in. Below are the 15 schools that consistently rank highest on VCE median and value-add, with the entry pathway noted for each. Selective-entry schools are open to any Victorian student who passes the test; zoned schools are open only if your home address falls inside the school’s catchment on Find My School.
Mac.Robertson Girls’ High School (selective entry)
Mac.Robertson Girls’ High School is one of Australia’s top academic schools and Victoria’s only selective-entry school for girls in Years 9–12. Located in South Melbourne, “Mac.Rob” consistently produces median VCE study scores in the high-30s and a long tail of 99.95 ATARs each year. Entry is by the single state-wide selective-entry test taken in Year 8. Strong all-round culture — debating, music, public speaking, leadership programs — and a tight Year 9 cohort that is academically ahead of the typical Victorian Year 9.
Melbourne High School (selective entry)
Melbourne High School in South Yarra is the boys’ counterpart to Mac.Rob, also Years 9–12 by selective-entry test. MHS regularly sits in the top three Victorian schools by VCE median and ATAR distribution, with particularly strong outcomes in maths, sciences, and humanities. Entry is via the same Year 8 state-wide test. Famous for rowing, cadets, music, and an unusually strong alumni network. The cohort is academically self-selecting, which lifts every classroom.
Nossal High School (selective entry)
Nossal High School in Berwick is co-educational selective entry for Years 9–12, sitting on a Monash University campus — students get exposure to university facilities and academics from Year 9. Strong STEM emphasis, consistent VCE medians in the high-30s, and the city’s southeast intake means it’s often the top option for academically-strong students in the southeast growth corridor (Berwick, Cranbourne, Pakenham, Narre Warren).
Suzanne Cory High School (selective entry)
Suzanne Cory High School in Werribee is the fourth selective-entry school, co-educational for Years 9–12, serving Melbourne’s western growth corridor. VCE medians sit in the mid-to-high 30s with strong outcomes in maths, biology, and chemistry. The most accessible selective school for families in Werribee, Point Cook, Tarneit, Hoppers Crossing, and Wyndham Vale. Same Year 8 state-wide test for entry.
John Monash Science School (selective entry, Year 10–12)
John Monash Science School in Clayton is a specialist STEM school co-located on Monash University’s Clayton campus. It’s a Year 10–12 only school (different from the four Year 9–12 selective schools above) with its own application process — you apply in Year 9 with a written application, references, and an interview rather than a single state-wide test. Outstanding outcomes in physics, chemistry, biology, and specialist maths; access to university research labs and Monash academics is a real differentiator.
Glen Waverley Secondary College (zoned)
Glen Waverley Secondary College in the eastern suburbs is one of the strongest co-ed zoned schools in Victoria. Years 7–12, with VCE medians regularly in the mid-30s and a deep accelerated learning program. The zone covers most of Glen Waverley and parts of Mount Waverley and Wheelers Hill — check the exact streets on Find My School. The Glen Waverley name has driven a real-estate premium in the zone for two decades.
Balwyn High School (zoned)
Balwyn High School covers the inner-eastern Balwyn / Balwyn North zone for Years 7–12. Strong VCE medians, a sizeable accelerated learning stream, and a long-running international-student program that broadens the cohort. Particularly known for languages (Chinese, Japanese, French) and music. Like Glen Waverley, Balwyn’s zone has shaped property prices for years.
McKinnon Secondary College (zoned)
McKinnon Secondary College in the bayside southeast (McKinnon, Bentleigh, Ormond) consistently posts top-tier VCE medians among zoned schools, with particularly strong music, performing arts, and sport programs. Years 7–12. The zone is small and tightly drawn — the McKinnon zone has been one of the most-searched school zones in Melbourne real-estate listings for the past decade.
Box Hill High School (zoned + selective stream)
Box Hill High School in the eastern suburbs runs an accelerated learning program (selective entry from Year 7 by school-administered test) alongside its zoned Year 7–12 cohort. Strong outcomes in maths and sciences, particularly through the accelerated stream. The zone covers parts of Box Hill, Box Hill South, and Mont Albert; check Find My School for street-level boundaries.
Williamstown High School (zoned)
Williamstown High School in Melbourne’s inner west serves Williamstown, Newport, and parts of Yarraville and Spotswood. Years 7–12 with two campuses (junior at Pasco Street, senior at Bayview Street). Solid VCE results, strong sailing and rowing programs given the bayside location, and a sustainability-focused curriculum. The zone is the natural choice for inner-western families who don’t want to drive across town.
Princes Hill Secondary College (zoned)
Princes Hill Secondary College in inner-north Carlton North serves Carlton, Carlton North, Princes Hill, Fitzroy North, and parts of Brunswick. A small, progressive, arts-strong school with a distinct culture — project-based learning, strong drama and visual arts, and a left-leaning inner-city cohort. VCE medians are solid; this school is chosen as much for fit as for results.
Brighton Secondary College (zoned)
Brighton Secondary College in the bayside southeast covers Brighton, Brighton East, and parts of Hampton and Caulfield South. Years 7–12 with a Sports Academy program (sport-specific training pathways alongside a normal academic load) and strong VCE outcomes. The zone is small and Brighton property prices reflect it.
Mount Waverley Secondary College (zoned)
Mount Waverley Secondary College serves Mount Waverley and parts of Glen Waverley and Pinewood. Years 7–12 across two campuses, strong VCE medians, and a substantial international and overseas-trained-teacher community that gives the school a global feel. Often a strong second choice for southeastern families just outside the Glen Waverley zone.
University High School (zoned)
University High School in Parkville covers parts of Carlton, Parkville, Kensington, North Melbourne, and Flemington. Years 7–12, with a long-running selective Elizabeth Blackburn Sciences program (entry from Year 10 by application) co-delivered with the University of Melbourne. The general zoned cohort is academically diverse; the school’s inner-city location and proximity to the University of Melbourne make it culturally distinctive.
Albert Park College (zoned)
Albert Park College in inner-bayside Albert Park serves Albert Park, Middle Park, Port Melbourne, South Melbourne, and St Kilda. Opened in 2011 and has grown a strong reputation quickly — particularly in the visual arts, music, and design technologies. Modern facilities, small Year 7 intake, and a strong inner-suburb parent community. The zone is small.
How does Melbourne school zoning actually work?
Every Victorian government school has a designated “zone” or catchment, and your child is automatically guaranteed a place at the school whose zone covers your home address. The Victorian Department of Education sets these zones; you can look up your address on the official Find My School portal, which will return your zoned primary school and your zoned secondary school instantly. Zones are based on your permanent residential address — the address on your driver’s licence, lease, or rates notice — not where you happen to be living temporarily. Zones can shift year to year as enrolments change, particularly in the southeast and inner-north growth corridors, so re-check the year your child is due to enrol rather than relying on what you saw three years ago.
How do I find my Melbourne school zone?
Use the official Victorian Department of Education tool at findmyschool.vic.gov.au. Type your address, hit search, and the map returns your zoned primary and secondary schools with the boundary outlined. Two things to watch: (1) zones for the following school year are usually published in October — if you’re moving house specifically for a school zone, check the boundary for the year your child will start, not the current year; and (2) some streets sit on zone borders, in which case Find My School will show you the precise side-of-the-street boundary. If you’re buying a property primarily for a specific school zone, get the zone confirmed in writing by the school before settlement — agents have been known to misquote.
What are the top selective public schools in Melbourne?
Victoria has four full-academic selective-entry high schools open to students from anywhere in the state — Mac.Robertson Girls’ High, Melbourne High, Nossal High, and Suzanne Cory High — plus John Monash Science School (Year 10–12, separate application). All four Year 9–12 schools admit students through a single combined entrance test taken in Year 8 (the “Year 9 entry test”), with one application form covering all four schools. Mac.Rob is single-sex girls; Melbourne High is single-sex boys; Nossal and Suzanne Cory are co-educational. Several zoned schools also run their own internal selective streams (Box Hill High’s accelerated learning program, University High’s Elizabeth Blackburn Sciences, Albert Park College’s art and design pathways) — these run inside a normal zoned school, with entry by school-administered test or application.
How do I get my child into Mac.Robertson Girls’ or Melbourne High?
Sit the Year 9 selective-entry test, which is administered each year in mid-June for Year 8 students applying for Year 9 entry the following year. Registrations open in February through the Victorian Department of Education’s parents portal. The test covers reading comprehension, mathematics, and writing — a single combined exam — and one application form lists your school preferences across all four Year 9–12 selective schools. Cut-offs vary by year and by school: Mac.Rob and Melbourne High are typically the most competitive, Suzanne Cory and Nossal slightly less. Test prep matters — familiarity with the question style and timing is the single biggest predictor of performance — so most families start serious preparation in Year 7 or early Year 8. A good Melbourne tutor can run weekly practice tests against the official format; we charge A$65/hr flat for selective-entry preparation (no premium for selective coaching, no contracts, just per-lesson billing).

Are public schools in Melbourne as good as private?
For academic outcomes, the strongest Melbourne public schools match or beat most private schools. The four selective-entry schools (Mac.Rob, MHS, Nossal, Suzanne Cory) plus John Monash Science School have produced VCE medians and 99.95 ATAR counts on par with Scotch College, Melbourne Grammar, MLC, and Carey Baptist for years — and at $0 in fees instead of A$35,000–A$45,000 a year. Top zoned schools (Glen Waverley, Balwyn, McKinnon, Box Hill, Mount Waverley) sit in the same band on academic results. Where private schools differentiate is breadth of co-curriculars (the rowing programs, the campus boarding houses, the international study tours), pastoral structure (smaller pastoral groups, dedicated chaplains and counsellors), and network effects (the alumni hiring pipelines and the social capital of an old-school tie). Whether those things are worth A$500,000 across Years 7–12 depends on what your family wants — not on the academic results, which the top public schools can match.
What’s the difference between zoned, selective, and academic-stream public schools?
Three distinct entry pathways operate inside Victoria’s government school system, and they often confuse new families. Zoned schools enrol students whose permanent address falls inside the school’s designated catchment on Find My School — entry is automatic and free, no test required. Fully selective-entry schools (the four Year 9–12 schools, plus Year 10–12 John Monash Science School) admit students from anywhere in Victoria via a state-wide test — address is irrelevant, only the test result matters. Academic-stream schools (Box Hill High, University High, Princes Hill, Albert Park College and others) are zoned schools that run an internal accelerated or selective stream alongside their normal cohort — you usually need to live in the zone and pass a school-run test or application to access the stream. The third category is the most often misunderstood: a parent will hear “Box Hill High has a selective program” and assume the whole school is selective, when in fact the bulk of students enter through the zone in Year 7 alongside a smaller selective Year 7 stream.
Which Melbourne suburbs have the best public schools?
Melbourne’s strongest public-school zones cluster in five regions. The eastern suburbs (Glen Waverley, Mount Waverley, Balwyn, Box Hill, Camberwell) hold the deepest concentration of top zoned high schools and the most established real-estate premiums. The bayside southeast (Brighton, McKinnon, Caulfield, Bentleigh) combines Brighton Secondary, McKinnon Secondary, and a strong primary feeder network. The inner north (Carlton, Princes Hill, Fitzroy North, Brunswick) is the Princes Hill Secondary catchment plus University High’s Parkville zone. The inner west (Williamstown, Newport, Yarraville) sits inside the Williamstown High zone with strong primary feeders. The southeast growth corridor (Berwick, Cranbourne, Narre Warren) is increasingly attractive because Nossal High sits inside it, opening selective-entry as a real option without a long commute. If selective-entry isn’t in play and you’re zone-shopping, your task is to balance house prices against zone strength and primary feeders.
How do I enrol my child in a Melbourne public school?
For Year 7 entry, the process runs almost a full year ahead. Most Year 6 students apply through their primary school in April–May of Year 6 using the “Year 6 to 7 transition” form, distributed by the Year 6 teacher. Your child is offered a place at your zoned secondary school by default. You can apply for a non-zoned school as well, but those places only open up if the school has capacity after all zoned applicants are placed — high-demand schools (Glen Waverley, McKinnon, Balwyn) almost never have capacity. Selective-entry applications open separately in February for the test in mid-June, with offers in September. For mid-year transfers or moves, contact the receiving school directly with proof of address (lease or rates notice). For primary school entry, applications open the year before kindergarten transition, with most schools running open days in March–May. The Department of Education’s parents portal is the official source.
What if my zoned school isn’t the right fit?
Three real options, in order of practicality. One: apply to a non-zoned public school. You can list a preferred school outside your zone on the enrolment form; if the school has capacity after all zoned applicants are placed, you may be offered a place. High-demand schools rarely have capacity. Two: target a selective-entry school. If your child is in Year 7 or Year 8, the selective-entry test in Year 8 opens up Mac.Rob, MHS, Nossal, or Suzanne Cory regardless of where you live — this is the single biggest unlock for families in average zones. Three: change your address. Many Melbourne families do move house specifically for a school zone, particularly into Glen Waverley, Balwyn, McKinnon, or Williamstown. If you’re considering this, get the zone confirmed in writing by the school before you sign a lease or contract — agents do misquote, and zones do shift. Read more on when changing schools is worth it.
How do I support my child academically once they’ve started?
The strongest signals that your child is thriving in their school come from three places: end-of-semester grades trending up across multiple subjects, your child willingly talking about lessons and teachers at home, and homework getting done without major battles. If any of those three is missing, intervene early — gaps in Years 7–9 compound into Years 10–12. The most common interventions Melbourne parents use are a weekly Melbourne tutor in the weakest subject (typically maths or English), a peer study group through the school, or a deliberate change of subject mix in Year 10. Tutero charges A$65/hr flat across primary, lower-secondary and senior years — same rate whether your child is in Year 5 or Year 12, no premium for selective-entry coaching, no contracts. When’s the right time to start tutoring? – usually as soon as you spot the early signs.
Related reading
- Top private schools in Melbourne: the companion sister-article covering Melbourne’s 15 leading private schools, fees, scholarships and entry timelines.
- How to find a quality tutor in Melbourne: what to look for, what to ask, and how Melbourne tutoring is priced.
- How to get a scholarship in Melbourne: private-school scholarships and academic bursaries explained.
- What every Melbourne parent should know about primary & high school: the wider Victorian-system primer.
- Proven strategies for acing your VCE exams: for once your child is in senior school.
- 4 reasons to consider changing your child’s school.
- Choosing the right school in 6 steps.
Bottom line
Melbourne’s public-school system is two systems stacked on top of each other: a state-wide selective-entry system that competes with the best private schools at $0 in fees, and a zoned system where your address determines your school. Use Find My School to confirm your zone in the year your child enrols, sit the selective-entry test in Year 8 if your child is academically strong, and start the conversation with your Year 6 primary teacher early. If your child needs targeted support — for selective-entry test prep, VCE subjects, or just confidence after a tough term — a Melbourne tutor at A$65/hr can fit alongside any school choice you make.
FAQ
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We recommend at least two to three session per week for consistent progress. However, this can vary based on your child's needs and goals.
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Victoria has four selective-entry public schools open to any student in the state — and they match the academic results of any private school in Melbourne, at $0 in fees.
Victoria has four selective-entry public schools open to any student in the state — and they match the academic results of any private school in Melbourne, at $0 in fees.
Victoria has four selective-entry public schools open to any student in the state — and they match the academic results of any private school in Melbourne, at $0 in fees.
Get your school zone confirmed in writing before you sign a lease — agents misquote, and zones do shift year to year.
Choosing a Melbourne public school comes down to three questions: which selective-entry schools your child is eligible for, what your local school zone looks like, and how the school's culture fits your family. Public schools in Melbourne can rival Victoria’s most expensive private schools on academic results — but only if you understand the system before you enrol.
This guide walks through Melbourne’s top 15 public schools, the four selective-entry high schools that take students from anywhere in the state, how Victorian school zoning actually works, and what to do if your zoned school isn’t the right fit. Updated May 2026.
Quick answer
Melbourne’s strongest public schools fall into two groups. The four selective-entry high schools — Mac.Robertson Girls’ High, Melbourne High, Nossal High, and Suzanne Cory High — admit Year 9–12 students from anywhere in Victoria via a single state-wide test, and consistently produce VCE medians above 35. The leading zoned public schools — Glen Waverley Secondary, Balwyn High, McKinnon Secondary, Box Hill High, Williamstown High, John Monash Science School (selective Year 10–12), Princes Hill Secondary, Brighton Secondary — require you to live inside their designated zone, which you can check on Find My School. Strong primary feeders matter at every Year 7 transition, so start the conversation in Year 5 if zoning matters to you.

What are the best public schools in Melbourne?
Melbourne’s top public schools split cleanly into selective-entry (entry by state-wide test, no zoning) and zoned high-performers (entry by address). Both groups regularly outperform many private schools on VCE results — the difference is how you get in. Below are the 15 schools that consistently rank highest on VCE median and value-add, with the entry pathway noted for each. Selective-entry schools are open to any Victorian student who passes the test; zoned schools are open only if your home address falls inside the school’s catchment on Find My School.
Mac.Robertson Girls’ High School (selective entry)
Mac.Robertson Girls’ High School is one of Australia’s top academic schools and Victoria’s only selective-entry school for girls in Years 9–12. Located in South Melbourne, “Mac.Rob” consistently produces median VCE study scores in the high-30s and a long tail of 99.95 ATARs each year. Entry is by the single state-wide selective-entry test taken in Year 8. Strong all-round culture — debating, music, public speaking, leadership programs — and a tight Year 9 cohort that is academically ahead of the typical Victorian Year 9.
Melbourne High School (selective entry)
Melbourne High School in South Yarra is the boys’ counterpart to Mac.Rob, also Years 9–12 by selective-entry test. MHS regularly sits in the top three Victorian schools by VCE median and ATAR distribution, with particularly strong outcomes in maths, sciences, and humanities. Entry is via the same Year 8 state-wide test. Famous for rowing, cadets, music, and an unusually strong alumni network. The cohort is academically self-selecting, which lifts every classroom.
Nossal High School (selective entry)
Nossal High School in Berwick is co-educational selective entry for Years 9–12, sitting on a Monash University campus — students get exposure to university facilities and academics from Year 9. Strong STEM emphasis, consistent VCE medians in the high-30s, and the city’s southeast intake means it’s often the top option for academically-strong students in the southeast growth corridor (Berwick, Cranbourne, Pakenham, Narre Warren).
Suzanne Cory High School (selective entry)
Suzanne Cory High School in Werribee is the fourth selective-entry school, co-educational for Years 9–12, serving Melbourne’s western growth corridor. VCE medians sit in the mid-to-high 30s with strong outcomes in maths, biology, and chemistry. The most accessible selective school for families in Werribee, Point Cook, Tarneit, Hoppers Crossing, and Wyndham Vale. Same Year 8 state-wide test for entry.
John Monash Science School (selective entry, Year 10–12)
John Monash Science School in Clayton is a specialist STEM school co-located on Monash University’s Clayton campus. It’s a Year 10–12 only school (different from the four Year 9–12 selective schools above) with its own application process — you apply in Year 9 with a written application, references, and an interview rather than a single state-wide test. Outstanding outcomes in physics, chemistry, biology, and specialist maths; access to university research labs and Monash academics is a real differentiator.
Glen Waverley Secondary College (zoned)
Glen Waverley Secondary College in the eastern suburbs is one of the strongest co-ed zoned schools in Victoria. Years 7–12, with VCE medians regularly in the mid-30s and a deep accelerated learning program. The zone covers most of Glen Waverley and parts of Mount Waverley and Wheelers Hill — check the exact streets on Find My School. The Glen Waverley name has driven a real-estate premium in the zone for two decades.
Balwyn High School (zoned)
Balwyn High School covers the inner-eastern Balwyn / Balwyn North zone for Years 7–12. Strong VCE medians, a sizeable accelerated learning stream, and a long-running international-student program that broadens the cohort. Particularly known for languages (Chinese, Japanese, French) and music. Like Glen Waverley, Balwyn’s zone has shaped property prices for years.
McKinnon Secondary College (zoned)
McKinnon Secondary College in the bayside southeast (McKinnon, Bentleigh, Ormond) consistently posts top-tier VCE medians among zoned schools, with particularly strong music, performing arts, and sport programs. Years 7–12. The zone is small and tightly drawn — the McKinnon zone has been one of the most-searched school zones in Melbourne real-estate listings for the past decade.
Box Hill High School (zoned + selective stream)
Box Hill High School in the eastern suburbs runs an accelerated learning program (selective entry from Year 7 by school-administered test) alongside its zoned Year 7–12 cohort. Strong outcomes in maths and sciences, particularly through the accelerated stream. The zone covers parts of Box Hill, Box Hill South, and Mont Albert; check Find My School for street-level boundaries.
Williamstown High School (zoned)
Williamstown High School in Melbourne’s inner west serves Williamstown, Newport, and parts of Yarraville and Spotswood. Years 7–12 with two campuses (junior at Pasco Street, senior at Bayview Street). Solid VCE results, strong sailing and rowing programs given the bayside location, and a sustainability-focused curriculum. The zone is the natural choice for inner-western families who don’t want to drive across town.
Princes Hill Secondary College (zoned)
Princes Hill Secondary College in inner-north Carlton North serves Carlton, Carlton North, Princes Hill, Fitzroy North, and parts of Brunswick. A small, progressive, arts-strong school with a distinct culture — project-based learning, strong drama and visual arts, and a left-leaning inner-city cohort. VCE medians are solid; this school is chosen as much for fit as for results.
Brighton Secondary College (zoned)
Brighton Secondary College in the bayside southeast covers Brighton, Brighton East, and parts of Hampton and Caulfield South. Years 7–12 with a Sports Academy program (sport-specific training pathways alongside a normal academic load) and strong VCE outcomes. The zone is small and Brighton property prices reflect it.
Mount Waverley Secondary College (zoned)
Mount Waverley Secondary College serves Mount Waverley and parts of Glen Waverley and Pinewood. Years 7–12 across two campuses, strong VCE medians, and a substantial international and overseas-trained-teacher community that gives the school a global feel. Often a strong second choice for southeastern families just outside the Glen Waverley zone.
University High School (zoned)
University High School in Parkville covers parts of Carlton, Parkville, Kensington, North Melbourne, and Flemington. Years 7–12, with a long-running selective Elizabeth Blackburn Sciences program (entry from Year 10 by application) co-delivered with the University of Melbourne. The general zoned cohort is academically diverse; the school’s inner-city location and proximity to the University of Melbourne make it culturally distinctive.
Albert Park College (zoned)
Albert Park College in inner-bayside Albert Park serves Albert Park, Middle Park, Port Melbourne, South Melbourne, and St Kilda. Opened in 2011 and has grown a strong reputation quickly — particularly in the visual arts, music, and design technologies. Modern facilities, small Year 7 intake, and a strong inner-suburb parent community. The zone is small.
How does Melbourne school zoning actually work?
Every Victorian government school has a designated “zone” or catchment, and your child is automatically guaranteed a place at the school whose zone covers your home address. The Victorian Department of Education sets these zones; you can look up your address on the official Find My School portal, which will return your zoned primary school and your zoned secondary school instantly. Zones are based on your permanent residential address — the address on your driver’s licence, lease, or rates notice — not where you happen to be living temporarily. Zones can shift year to year as enrolments change, particularly in the southeast and inner-north growth corridors, so re-check the year your child is due to enrol rather than relying on what you saw three years ago.
How do I find my Melbourne school zone?
Use the official Victorian Department of Education tool at findmyschool.vic.gov.au. Type your address, hit search, and the map returns your zoned primary and secondary schools with the boundary outlined. Two things to watch: (1) zones for the following school year are usually published in October — if you’re moving house specifically for a school zone, check the boundary for the year your child will start, not the current year; and (2) some streets sit on zone borders, in which case Find My School will show you the precise side-of-the-street boundary. If you’re buying a property primarily for a specific school zone, get the zone confirmed in writing by the school before settlement — agents have been known to misquote.
What are the top selective public schools in Melbourne?
Victoria has four full-academic selective-entry high schools open to students from anywhere in the state — Mac.Robertson Girls’ High, Melbourne High, Nossal High, and Suzanne Cory High — plus John Monash Science School (Year 10–12, separate application). All four Year 9–12 schools admit students through a single combined entrance test taken in Year 8 (the “Year 9 entry test”), with one application form covering all four schools. Mac.Rob is single-sex girls; Melbourne High is single-sex boys; Nossal and Suzanne Cory are co-educational. Several zoned schools also run their own internal selective streams (Box Hill High’s accelerated learning program, University High’s Elizabeth Blackburn Sciences, Albert Park College’s art and design pathways) — these run inside a normal zoned school, with entry by school-administered test or application.
How do I get my child into Mac.Robertson Girls’ or Melbourne High?
Sit the Year 9 selective-entry test, which is administered each year in mid-June for Year 8 students applying for Year 9 entry the following year. Registrations open in February through the Victorian Department of Education’s parents portal. The test covers reading comprehension, mathematics, and writing — a single combined exam — and one application form lists your school preferences across all four Year 9–12 selective schools. Cut-offs vary by year and by school: Mac.Rob and Melbourne High are typically the most competitive, Suzanne Cory and Nossal slightly less. Test prep matters — familiarity with the question style and timing is the single biggest predictor of performance — so most families start serious preparation in Year 7 or early Year 8. A good Melbourne tutor can run weekly practice tests against the official format; we charge A$65/hr flat for selective-entry preparation (no premium for selective coaching, no contracts, just per-lesson billing).

Are public schools in Melbourne as good as private?
For academic outcomes, the strongest Melbourne public schools match or beat most private schools. The four selective-entry schools (Mac.Rob, MHS, Nossal, Suzanne Cory) plus John Monash Science School have produced VCE medians and 99.95 ATAR counts on par with Scotch College, Melbourne Grammar, MLC, and Carey Baptist for years — and at $0 in fees instead of A$35,000–A$45,000 a year. Top zoned schools (Glen Waverley, Balwyn, McKinnon, Box Hill, Mount Waverley) sit in the same band on academic results. Where private schools differentiate is breadth of co-curriculars (the rowing programs, the campus boarding houses, the international study tours), pastoral structure (smaller pastoral groups, dedicated chaplains and counsellors), and network effects (the alumni hiring pipelines and the social capital of an old-school tie). Whether those things are worth A$500,000 across Years 7–12 depends on what your family wants — not on the academic results, which the top public schools can match.
What’s the difference between zoned, selective, and academic-stream public schools?
Three distinct entry pathways operate inside Victoria’s government school system, and they often confuse new families. Zoned schools enrol students whose permanent address falls inside the school’s designated catchment on Find My School — entry is automatic and free, no test required. Fully selective-entry schools (the four Year 9–12 schools, plus Year 10–12 John Monash Science School) admit students from anywhere in Victoria via a state-wide test — address is irrelevant, only the test result matters. Academic-stream schools (Box Hill High, University High, Princes Hill, Albert Park College and others) are zoned schools that run an internal accelerated or selective stream alongside their normal cohort — you usually need to live in the zone and pass a school-run test or application to access the stream. The third category is the most often misunderstood: a parent will hear “Box Hill High has a selective program” and assume the whole school is selective, when in fact the bulk of students enter through the zone in Year 7 alongside a smaller selective Year 7 stream.
Which Melbourne suburbs have the best public schools?
Melbourne’s strongest public-school zones cluster in five regions. The eastern suburbs (Glen Waverley, Mount Waverley, Balwyn, Box Hill, Camberwell) hold the deepest concentration of top zoned high schools and the most established real-estate premiums. The bayside southeast (Brighton, McKinnon, Caulfield, Bentleigh) combines Brighton Secondary, McKinnon Secondary, and a strong primary feeder network. The inner north (Carlton, Princes Hill, Fitzroy North, Brunswick) is the Princes Hill Secondary catchment plus University High’s Parkville zone. The inner west (Williamstown, Newport, Yarraville) sits inside the Williamstown High zone with strong primary feeders. The southeast growth corridor (Berwick, Cranbourne, Narre Warren) is increasingly attractive because Nossal High sits inside it, opening selective-entry as a real option without a long commute. If selective-entry isn’t in play and you’re zone-shopping, your task is to balance house prices against zone strength and primary feeders.
How do I enrol my child in a Melbourne public school?
For Year 7 entry, the process runs almost a full year ahead. Most Year 6 students apply through their primary school in April–May of Year 6 using the “Year 6 to 7 transition” form, distributed by the Year 6 teacher. Your child is offered a place at your zoned secondary school by default. You can apply for a non-zoned school as well, but those places only open up if the school has capacity after all zoned applicants are placed — high-demand schools (Glen Waverley, McKinnon, Balwyn) almost never have capacity. Selective-entry applications open separately in February for the test in mid-June, with offers in September. For mid-year transfers or moves, contact the receiving school directly with proof of address (lease or rates notice). For primary school entry, applications open the year before kindergarten transition, with most schools running open days in March–May. The Department of Education’s parents portal is the official source.
What if my zoned school isn’t the right fit?
Three real options, in order of practicality. One: apply to a non-zoned public school. You can list a preferred school outside your zone on the enrolment form; if the school has capacity after all zoned applicants are placed, you may be offered a place. High-demand schools rarely have capacity. Two: target a selective-entry school. If your child is in Year 7 or Year 8, the selective-entry test in Year 8 opens up Mac.Rob, MHS, Nossal, or Suzanne Cory regardless of where you live — this is the single biggest unlock for families in average zones. Three: change your address. Many Melbourne families do move house specifically for a school zone, particularly into Glen Waverley, Balwyn, McKinnon, or Williamstown. If you’re considering this, get the zone confirmed in writing by the school before you sign a lease or contract — agents do misquote, and zones do shift. Read more on when changing schools is worth it.
How do I support my child academically once they’ve started?
The strongest signals that your child is thriving in their school come from three places: end-of-semester grades trending up across multiple subjects, your child willingly talking about lessons and teachers at home, and homework getting done without major battles. If any of those three is missing, intervene early — gaps in Years 7–9 compound into Years 10–12. The most common interventions Melbourne parents use are a weekly Melbourne tutor in the weakest subject (typically maths or English), a peer study group through the school, or a deliberate change of subject mix in Year 10. Tutero charges A$65/hr flat across primary, lower-secondary and senior years — same rate whether your child is in Year 5 or Year 12, no premium for selective-entry coaching, no contracts. When’s the right time to start tutoring? – usually as soon as you spot the early signs.
Related reading
- Top private schools in Melbourne: the companion sister-article covering Melbourne’s 15 leading private schools, fees, scholarships and entry timelines.
- How to find a quality tutor in Melbourne: what to look for, what to ask, and how Melbourne tutoring is priced.
- How to get a scholarship in Melbourne: private-school scholarships and academic bursaries explained.
- What every Melbourne parent should know about primary & high school: the wider Victorian-system primer.
- Proven strategies for acing your VCE exams: for once your child is in senior school.
- 4 reasons to consider changing your child’s school.
- Choosing the right school in 6 steps.
Bottom line
Melbourne’s public-school system is two systems stacked on top of each other: a state-wide selective-entry system that competes with the best private schools at $0 in fees, and a zoned system where your address determines your school. Use Find My School to confirm your zone in the year your child enrols, sit the selective-entry test in Year 8 if your child is academically strong, and start the conversation with your Year 6 primary teacher early. If your child needs targeted support — for selective-entry test prep, VCE subjects, or just confidence after a tough term — a Melbourne tutor at A$65/hr can fit alongside any school choice you make.
Victoria has four selective-entry public schools open to any student in the state — and they match the academic results of any private school in Melbourne, at $0 in fees.
Get your school zone confirmed in writing before you sign a lease — agents misquote, and zones do shift year to year.
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