Australia's Undergraduate Enrolment Landscape in 2026: A Surge Like No Other
Australia's universities are experiencing an unprecedented boom in undergraduate enrolments for 2026, with more domestic students commencing degrees than ever before. Preliminary data from the Tertiary Admissions Centres (TACs) covering around 80 percent of applications reveals a 4.6 percent increase in applications and a 2.5 percent rise in offers compared to the previous year. This surge aligns with the government's push under the Universities Accord to expand access, allocating an extra 9,500 Commonwealth Supported Places (CSPs) this year. Domestic undergraduate numbers have climbed to approximately 746,369, marking a 0.8 percent growth primarily at public Table A providers.
Minister for Education Jason Clare highlighted this milestone, stating, “We’re creating more places at uni and it’s great to see them being taken up. This means more Australians will go to uni this year than ever before.” The momentum builds on 2024's 388,890 domestic commencements, which were already up 4 percent, reflecting a steady recovery from pandemic disruptions and a shift towards skills-aligned education.
Health Fields Lead the Charge: Nursing and Beyond
Health-related courses dominate the 2026 intake, capturing over 22 percent of undergraduate offers—the highest share among all fields. Nursing stands out with a 6 percent increase in offers, driven by persistent workforce shortages, an ageing population, and strong job security. Post-COVID recognition of healthcare heroes has further boosted appeal, with projections showing the healthcare and social assistance sector growing 28 percent over the next decade.
Nursing programs now emphasize practical skills like telehealth and mental health support, preparing graduates for diverse roles in hospitals, aged care, and community settings. For aspiring nurses, this boom means more entry pathways, including accelerated degrees and rural incentives. Regional universities like Charles Sturt and James Cook have seen particularly strong upticks, addressing critical shortages in underserved areas.
Teaching Enrolments Rebound Amid National Shortages
Teaching degrees have surged 6 percent in offers, a welcome rebound as Australia grapples with a teacher shortage projected to reach 4,000 by 2025 and worsen. Early childhood and primary education lead, with secondary STEM teaching also gaining traction thanks to scholarships and fee reductions under the Teach for Australia initiatives.
The process typically involves a four-year Bachelor of Education (BEd), blending pedagogy, curriculum design, and classroom placements. Universities like Deakin and Monash report oversubscribed cohorts, reflecting government incentives like up to $20,000 relocation grants for rural postings. This growth supports the Accord's goal of a skilled educator workforce for the 80 percent tertiary-qualified target by 2050.
- Increased CSPs in priority areas like maths and science teaching.
- Mandatory placements ensuring hands-on experience from year one.
- Postgraduate pathways for career-changers via Master of Teaching programs.
Engineering and Science: Fueling Australia's Innovation Engine
Engineering offers jumped 9 percent, the largest proportional increase, while science grew 8 percent. Civil, mechanical, and renewable energy engineering thrive amid infrastructure booms like Snowy 2.0 and net-zero transitions. Enrolments reflect demand for 90,000 additional engineers by 2030, per Infrastructure Australia.
Science fields, including biology and environmental science, benefit from research funding and green jobs. Universities such as UNSW and UQ lead with specialized programs in quantum engineering and sustainable materials. Students enter via ATAR scores around 80-95, followed by rigorous maths prerequisites and industry projects.

Social Work's Remarkable 19 Percent Spike
Social work claims the top growth spot at 19 percent more offers, fueled by rising mental health needs, family violence responses, and NDIS expansion. Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) programs now integrate trauma-informed practice and digital case management.
Graduates enjoy near-100 percent employment within four months, averaging $75,000 starting salaries. Institutions like RMIT and Flinders highlight community placements as key differentiators. This surge addresses a 20 percent vacancy rate in child protection and aged care roles.
Society and Culture Holds Strong at 21 Percent
Society and Culture fields, encompassing psychology, law, and sociology, secure 21 percent of offers. Psychology booms with teletherapy demand, while criminology ties into justice reforms. These programs foster critical thinking vital for policy and advocacy roles.
The Shadow Over Humanities and Creative Arts
Amid the booms, humanities and creative arts face steep declines. Undergraduate creative arts enrolments dropped at 30 of 46 providers from 2018-2023, with some halving. Forty-eight degrees were axed since 2018, linked to the Job-ready Graduates scheme doubling fees for arts ($17,399 annually vs. $4,738 for maths).
Year 12 arts subjects fell 21 percent to 2023: drama -39 percent, dance -38 percent. Experts warn of an “artless country,” with Universities Australia urging fee reforms. Prof. Sandra Gattenhof notes a “rollercoaster decline” disincentivizing students, threatening cultural policy goals.Read the full Guardian analysis.
IT also lags at under 3 percent offers, down 0.7 percent, as students opt for bootcamps or embedded skills.
Drivers of Change: Policy, Economy, and Job Markets
Government funding expansions, HECS-HELP adjustments, and skills shortages propel vocational fields. Cost-of-living pressures favor high-employment degrees, while AI anxieties boost practical tech-adjacent studies. Cultural shifts prioritize ROI, sidelining humanities perceived as less lucrative.
| Field | Offer Growth 2026 | Share of Offers |
|---|---|---|
| Health | + (leading) | >22% |
| Social Work | +19% | Part of Society/Culture |
| Engineering | +9% | 8.9% |
| Science | +8% | 12.9% |
| Teaching/Nursing | +6% each | Health/Education |
| IT | Decline | <3% |
University Impacts: Opportunities and Challenges
Public universities absorb most growth, but humanities cuts strain diversity. Staff shortages in booming fields prompt adjunct hiring; explore higher ed jobs for openings. Attrition dipped to 12 percent in 2024, signaling better retention.

Stakeholder Perspectives and Real-World Cases
Students like Sarah from regional NSW chose nursing for stability: “Job security and helping people won out over my arts passion.” Universities Australia’s Luke Sheehy calls for balanced funding. ANU’s arts restructure exemplifies pressures.
- Deakin University: 15% teaching surge, new rural hubs.
- UNSW: Engineering doubled scholarships.
- UTS: Cut media degrees amid 50% drop.
Future Outlook: Reforms and Actionable Advice
With 16,000 more places in 2027 and 200,000 over a decade, growth continues. Humanities advocates push fee equity. For students: Assess job outcomes via Rate My Professor; career-changers, check higher ed career advice. Job seekers in booming fields, visit university jobs and higher ed jobs.
Balanced curricula integrating humanities skills like ethics into STEM could mitigate divides. Australia’s workforce will benefit from this practical pivot, but nurturing creativity remains essential.