What is the LANTITE Test?
The Literacy and Numeracy Test for Initial Teacher Education (LANTITE) is a mandatory assessment for all students enrolled in accredited Initial Teacher Education (ITE) programs across Australia. Introduced in 2016 by the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER), it ensures that aspiring teachers possess personal literacy and numeracy skills at a level equivalent to the top 30 percent of the Australian adult population. This standard aims to uphold the quality of teaching in K-12 schools, early childhood centers, and TAFE institutions.
LANTITE consists of two separate components: literacy and numeracy. The literacy test evaluates skills in reading comprehension, writing mechanics, and text analysis across various formats like articles, reports, and instructional materials. The numeracy test covers mathematical reasoning, data interpretation, and problem-solving relevant to classroom contexts, such as budgeting for school activities or analyzing student performance data. Each component is delivered online via remote proctoring, with multiple test windows available throughout the year.
From 2024, ITE students must attempt the test by the end of their first year of study, though passing is not required at that stage. This early intervention allows universities to provide targeted support. For prospective students considering a teaching career, sitting the test before enrollment is now possible, helping gauge readiness without risking degree progression.
The History of LANTITE Attempt Limits
Prior to recent reforms, LANTITE had strict attempt limits to encourage preparation and maintain standards. Enrolled ITE students were typically allowed three attempts per component, with some providers or states permitting up to five through special approval. Exceeding these often meant delaying graduation or, in extreme cases, exiting the program.
This policy stemmed from the 2015 agreement by Education Ministers to implement a national benchmark. Early data showed high pass rates, but a subset of students struggled, particularly with numeracy or if English was not their first language. Feedback highlighted stress from limited retries, prompting reviews under the National Teacher Workforce Action Plan.
A trial launched in late 2023 increased permitted attempts and enhanced feedback reports, revealing improved outcomes. This paved the way for permanent changes, reflecting Australia's ongoing teacher shortage crisis, where over 4,000 vacancies were reported in public schools alone in 2025.
Unlimited Attempts: The 2025 Policy Shift
The pivotal update came in 2025: Education Ministers agreed to remove all test attempt limits for LANTITE. Now, candidates—whether enrolled ITE students, prospective entrants, or unenrolled individuals—can sit each component as many times as needed until they meet the standard. This applies nationwide, administered uniformly by ACER.
Official confirmation from the Department of Education states: "From 2025 there will be no test limits for candidates sitting the LANTITE." Prospective students have always had unlimited tries, but now enrolled students benefit equally. This eliminates the fear of permanent failure, allowing persistent effort without program expulsion risks.Learn more on the official Department site.
In practice, this means if you fail literacy on your first try, you can rebook for the next window—such as the upcoming 2026 Window 2 from late March—without caps. Results are released weeks after each window, with detailed feedback to guide improvements.
Drivers Behind Removing LANTITE Limits
Australia faces a critical teacher shortage, projected to worsen with 20,000 vacancies by 2030 in K-12 and early childhood sectors. The National Teacher Workforce Action Plan identified LANTITE barriers as contributing to dropout rates among capable candidates. The 2023 trial proved that unlimited attempts boosted participation and success, with universities reporting fewer delayed graduations.
Stakeholder perspectives vary: Teacher unions like the Australian Education Union welcomed the change for equity, especially for regional and First Nations students. Critics argue it might dilute standards, but data counters this—overall pass rates remain at 95 percent. Universities now invest more in preparation, aligning with TAFE and school demands for qualified staff.
LANTITE Pass Rates: Insights from Data
From 2016 to 2024, 175,908 unique candidates attempted both components, with 95.2 percent ultimately passing. First-attempt success hovers at 89 percent for literacy and 91 percent for numeracy, rising to over 93 percent within the first year.View the full LANTITE Data Snapshot.
| Year | Literacy 1st Attempt (%) | Numeracy 1st Attempt (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 88.1 | 94.2 |
| 2023 | 89.6 | 93.5 |
| 2022 | 90.3 | 92.1 |
Demographic equity is notable: First Nations candidates pass at rates comparable to non-Indigenous peers. Challenges persist for non-native English speakers in literacy, underscoring preparation needs.
Photo by Drew Beamer on Unsplash
Impacts on Aspiring Teachers and Schools
Unlimited attempts reduce anxiety, enabling career changers—like those from business or trades—to pursue early childhood or primary teaching without one-off failure derailing dreams. Universities report higher retention, benefiting TAFE pathways into vocational education.
For schools, this means a steadier supply of graduates ready for classrooms. In New South Wales and Victoria, where shortages hit hardest, principals note improved applicant pools. However, candidates must still pass before graduation and registration with bodies like the Victorian Institute of Teaching.
Effective Preparation Strategies
Success demands targeted practice. Start with ACER's free practice tests to benchmark skills. Focus on weak areas: for numeracy, master data representation and measurement; for literacy, hone inference and editing.
- Review feedback reports post-attempt—they pinpoint exact shortfalls.
- Join university workshops or online courses simulating test conditions.
- Practice under timed, proctored settings to build stamina (two hours per component).
- Utilize resources like Khan Academy for numeracy or ABC Education for literacy texts.
Many pass on second tries, with 50 percent success rate after first failure per studies.
University and Institutional Support
Institutions like Western Sydney University and Southern Cross University offer unlimited attempts alongside tailored programs. Flinders University runs prep sessions ahead of windows. TAFE providers integrate LANTITE prep into certificates for teacher aides transitioning to full roles.ACER's official LANTITE portal lists provider supports.
Regional campuses provide extra time for travel to proctored sessions, addressing equity in Queensland and Western Australia.
Navigating State Variations and Registration
While national, implementation aligns with state boards. In Queensland, the QCT requires LANTITE for full registration; Tasmania emphasizes it for early childhood. No state imposes extra limits post-2025.
- Check your ITE provider's policy on support hours.
- Prospective students: Pass pre-enrollment to strengthen applications.
Real-World Stories and Case Studies
Take Sarah, a Melbourne career changer who failed numeracy thrice pre-2025 but passed on her sixth try post-reform, now teaching Year 5. In Darwin, Indigenous student Jordan used unlimited retries with cultural support, graduating into a remote school role.
Forums like Reddit's r/AustralianTeachers share triumphs: one user passed after 10 attempts, crediting persistent practice amid policy relief.
Photo by Hakim Menikh on Unsplash
2026 Test Windows and Future Outlook
2026 schedules include Window 1 (Feb 9-22), Window 2 (Mar 31-Apr), up to Window 4. With teacher demand rising—especially STEM and special ed—the policy supports supply.View 2026 dates.
Future enhancements may include adaptive testing, but unlimited access endures, prioritizing access over gates.
Actionable Next Steps
Register via ACER, practice rigorously, seek uni aid. Unlimited attempts mean persistence pays—your teaching career awaits.
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