Jamb.Guide

ABUAD cut off mark for Economics 2026/2027

PrivateSocial Sciences

The 2026 UTME cut-off for Economics at Afe Babalola University is below, alongside the institutional aggregate model, an honest path-to-admission walkthrough and the year-on-year change.

Summary

Economics at Afe Babalola University requires a 2026 JAMB UTME cut-off of 236 and 5 O'Level credits including English Language, Mathematics, Economics, two other subjects. The programme runs for 4 years leading to Bachelor's degree in Economics (BSc / BA), with applications routed through JAMB and ABUAD's post-UTME screening.

Quick facts
2026 UTME cut-off
236
2025 cut-off
232 (+4 year-on-year)
UTME subjects
English Language, Mathematics, Economics, one Social Science subject
O'Level credits
English Language, Mathematics, Economics, two other subjects
Duration
4 years
Credential awarded
Bachelor's degree in Economics (BSc / BA)
Application route
JAMB UTME + ABUAD screening
Institution type
Private (Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti)
2026 UTME cut-off
236
Out of 400
2025 UTME
232
Prior cycle
Year over year
+4
2025 to 2026
Estimated aggregate 2026
71.5
Estimated, 100-point scale

Where this cut-off ranks

The 2026 UTME cut-off for Economics at ABUAD stands at 236. Among the 48 institutions offering Economics in our guide, ABUAD ranks 13th by cut-off, placing the programme in the upper half of national competitiveness for the course.

Compared to 2025, the figure climbed by 4 points, reflecting the stronger national candidate pool and rising demand for the course at ABUAD.

Clearing 236 at UTME is the threshold to be considered, not a guarantee of admission. The post-UTME or screening aggregate decides who actually gets the place. A typical aggregate for Economics at ABUAD that secures an offer sits broadly in the 71.5+ range on the 100-point scale, though the exact threshold moves year to year with applicant volume.

How ABUAD calculates the aggregate

Afe Babalola University uses the standard Nigerian aggregate model for Economics: a weighted blend of UTME score, post-UTME or screening result, and O'level grade points. The most common federal-university split is 50% UTME, 30% post-UTME, 20% O'level, scaled to a 100-point aggregate.

Worked example: a candidate with a UTME of 250 (= 31.25 of 50), a post-UTME score of 65 of 100 (= 19.5 of 30) and five A1 grades at O'level (= 20 of 20) finishes on an aggregate of 70.75, comfortably above typical Economics thresholds at most institutions. A weaker O'level pulls the number down materially, which is why many candidates underestimate the role of secondary-school results in the admission decision.

Each component matters in proportion to its weight. UTME at 50% remains the largest single component, but post-UTME at 30% is enough to lift or sink an otherwise borderline application. O'level grades at 20% reward consistent strength across the school years.

Private institutions like ABUAD sometimes diverge from the 50-30-20 split, using an internal aptitude test or interview instead of a points-based post-UTME. The principle remains the same: a single component cannot redeem a weak overall profile, and candidates should prepare for every stage of the screening.

UTME subjects

  • English Language
  • Mathematics
  • Economics
  • one Social Science subject

O'level requirements

  • English Language
  • Mathematics
  • Economics
  • two other subjects

Five credit passes at one sitting (or two acceptable sittings) are typically required.

Realistic path to admission

A realistic plan for Economics at ABUAD starts with a UTME target above the cut-off, not at the cut-off. Aim for 251+, which gives a comfortable margin and protects against last-minute rises in the cut-off. Candidates who score exactly at the cut-off are often squeezed out by post-UTME aggregates, because higher-scoring candidates rank above them on the final list.

Post-UTME performance matters as much as the UTME score. Even a candidate at 251+ needs a strong post-UTME to translate eligibility into admission. Past papers, focused revision of the post-UTME syllabus and timed practice are the standard preparation.

If 236 looks out of reach, consider second-choice institutions for the same course at lower cut-offs in this guide, or related courses at ABUAD with lower cut-offs. The change-of-course window during the cycle is the formal route to switch, and many candidates use it to recover from a UTME score that fell short of the first-choice target.

The cut-off has risen against 2025, so plan with the assumption that the 2027 cycle could push it further upward. Confirm the official ABUAD admission portal for any mid-cycle adjustments before paying any fees.

Other universities offering Economics

InstitutionType2026 UTME cut-off
UNILAG
Lagos
federal254
UI
Oyo
federal253
OAU
Osun
federal247
UNN
Enugu
federal244
AUN
Adamawa
private243
CU
Ogun
private243
PAU
Lagos
private242
NDA
Kaduna
federal241
LMU
Kwara
private240
UNILORIN
Kwara
federal238
BUK
Kano
federal237
BOWEN
Osun
private237
ABUAD
Ekiti
private236
FUTMINNA
Niger
federal236
UNIBEN
Edo
federal236
FUTO
Imo
federal235
MAUTECH
Adamawa
federal235
UNIZIK
Anambra
federal235
ABU
Kaduna
federal234
IMSU
Imo
state234
RSU
Rivers
state234
ATBU
Bauchi
federal232
DELSU
Delta
state232
EKSU
Ekiti
state232
FUOYE
Ekiti
federal232
KSU
Kogi
state232
KWASU
Kwara
state232
UNIABUJA
FCT
federal232
UNIPORT
Rivers
federal232
UDUSOK
Sokoto
federal232
ABSU
Abia
state231
LASU
Lagos
state231
UNICAL
Cross River
federal231
FUBK
Kebbi
federal230
FUOtuoke
Bayelsa
federal230
FUNAAB
Ogun
federal230
MOUAU
Abia
federal230
OOU
Ogun
state230
EBSU
Ebonyi
state229
AAUA
Ondo
state228
FUKashere
Gombe
federal228
FUWukari
Taraba
federal228
FULokoja
Kogi
federal227
FUDMA
Katsina
federal226
FUGashua
Yobe
federal226
FULafia
Nasarawa
federal226
FUGusau
Zamfara
federal225
NOUN
FCT
federal220

Frequently asked questions

What is the ABUAD cut-off mark for Economics in 2026?

ABUAD's 2026 UTME cut-off for Economics is 236. In 2025, it was 232, so the figure climbed by 4 points year-on-year.

How do I calculate my aggregate for Economics at ABUAD?

Use the standard 50-30-20 split: UTME score rescaled to 50, post-UTME rescaled to 30 and O'level grade points rescaled to 20, totalling 100. For example, a UTME of 250 contributes 31.25 of 50, a post-UTME of 70 of 100 contributes 21 of 30, and five A1 grades at O'level contribute 20 of 20, for a total aggregate of 72.25.

What are the O'level requirements for Economics at ABUAD?

Five credit passes at O'level, at one sitting or two acceptable sittings, in English Language, Mathematics, Economics and two other subjects. Credit-level passes (C6 or better) are the minimum at most institutions, though competitive programmes effectively need stronger grades to clear the post-UTME aggregate.

When does ABUAD release post-UTME results for Economics?

As a private institution, ABUAD runs internal screening rather than a points-based post-UTME, and results are typically communicated through the candidate's portal within two to four weeks of completing the screening.

How competitive is Economics at ABUAD?

Out of 48 institutions tracked here that offer Economics, ABUAD ranks 13th by 2026 cut-off (236). This places the programme in the upper half of national competitiveness.

What if I don't meet the ABUAD cut-off for Economics?

Candidates who fall short of 236 can consider second-choice institutions where the cut-off is lower, related courses at ABUAD that may accept their score, or the change-of-course window during the admission cycle. Direct Entry routes, JUPEB programmes and pre-degree programmes are longer-route alternatives.