Teacher Passport
This guide is for anyone heading into NSW teaching who needs to know exactly where LANTITE fits — ITE students on a Conditional pathway, graduates moving to Provisional, and degree-only entrants. It explains the NESA accreditation levels, where the LANTITE pass is required at each, and what the 1 August 2026 reform changes. It is factual and draws on NESA and ACER guidance current at June 2026.
Teacher Passport
Yes. You cannot hold active NESA accreditation without passing both LANTITE components, and you must hold active accreditation to teach in any NSW school or centre-based early childhood service. The test is not optional and there is no NSW-specific alternative to it. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
NESA (NSW Education Standards Authority) is the NSW accreditation authority. It grants and maintains your accreditation. ACER (Australian Council for Educational Research) administers LANTITE, the Literacy and Numeracy Test for Initial Teacher Education, nationally. ACER runs the test; NESA decides where the pass fits your NSW pathway. NESA is not VIT (the Victorian authority) or QCT (the Queensland authority); those regulate teachers in their own states only. (Source: NESA and ACER, 2026.)
Since November 2022, NESA has been the single accreditation authority across NSW government, Catholic and independent schools. Whichever sector you teach in, the same accreditation rules and the same LANTITE requirement apply. (Source: NESA and sector peak bodies, 2022 and 2026.)
The requirement is the same whether you are a graduate, a current ITE student on a Conditional pathway, or a degree-only entrant. None of these routes has an exemption from LANTITE; the test sits somewhere on every NSW pathway. What changes between them is when in the pathway the pass is required, which the next sections set out. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
Teacher Passport
NSW accreditation runs in levels. You move up as you qualify and gain experience. The first three are mandatory stepping stones to full accreditation; the last two are voluntary national certifications. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
| Level | Who it's for | Where LANTITE applies | Mandatory? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conditional | ITE students at 75% of credit points (undergraduate, e.g. BEd) or 50% (grad-entry, e.g. MTeach); or degree-only entrants (3-year bachelor's in a teaching area plus a non-casual offer of at least one term) | From 1 Aug 2026: must have passed before it is granted | Yes (stepping stone) |
| Provisional | Graduates of an approved teaching qualification equivalent to a four-year degree | Must have passed (required to graduate) | Yes (stepping stone) |
| Proficient | All teachers; achieved within the maximum timeframe and then maintained | Already passed at an earlier stage | Yes (full accreditation) |
| Highly Accomplished | Experienced teachers seeking national certification | n/a | Voluntary |
| Lead | Teachers leading school-wide practice | n/a | Voluntary |
Conditional lets you teach before you have finished your qualification — either as an ITE student far enough through an approved degree or as a degree-only entrant with relevant subject qualifications and a job offer. Provisional is for graduates of an approved teaching qualification. Proficient is full accreditation, which you must reach within NESA's maximum timeframe and then maintain. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
LANTITE has always sat at the graduation point: you must pass to graduate from an approved teaching degree, which is what gets you to Provisional. The 2026 reform adds a second, earlier gate at Conditional. The two requirements are additive, not alternatives. (Source: NESA Conditional, Provisional and accreditation pages, 2026.)
Teacher Passport
From 1 August 2026, applicants must pass LANTITE before Conditional accreditation is granted. This moves the LANTITE gate from the graduation/Provisional stage to the Conditional (entry) stage for anyone entering the classroom on a Conditional pathway. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
Before this change, Conditional accreditation did not require a LANTITE pass up front. NSW ITE students passed LANTITE before their final professional experience placement, in order to graduate and gain Provisional accreditation, so the test effectively sat later in the journey. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
The reason for the change is to make sure teachers entering classrooms on a Conditional pathway already meet the literacy and numeracy floor the test sets. NESA gave deliberate lead time to 1 August 2026 so students, providers and employers could plan around it. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
Two further changes landed earlier, from 1 March 2026:
NESA also recommends a reduced teaching load of up to 0.6 FTE for conditionally accredited teachers as a wellbeing measure. (Source: NESA news, 2026.)
Teacher Passport
The degree-only pathway lets someone without a teaching qualification gain Conditional accreditation if they hold a three-year bachelor's degree in a teaching subject area and have a non-casual offer of employment for at least one school term. From 1 March 2026 the offer must be formal and non-casual, and the annual progression update applies. From 1 August 2026 a degree-only entrant, like any Conditional applicant, must have passed LANTITE before accreditation is granted. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
A note for anyone relying on older guidance: the pre-reform 24-month allowance to submit LANTITE results after starting is not carried forward as the current rule. The standard now is to pass before Conditional is granted. Any period to pass after starting exists only through the urgent-staffing exception below, not as a general entitlement. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
From 1 August 2026, where staffing is urgent, the principal or employer may apply to NESA on the teacher's behalf to have Conditional accreditation granted before LANTITE is passed. In effect this extends the date by which NESA must receive the pass result. The application is made by form emailed to ITApriority@nesa.nsw.edu.au. (Source: NESA Conditional accreditation page, 2026.)
Treat this as a case-by-case discretion, exercised by NESA at the employer's request, not a guaranteed window. NESA does not publish a fixed length for the post-grant period to pass LANTITE under this extension, so the length varies by case — the employer should contact NESA directly rather than assume a set timeframe. (Source: NESA Conditional accreditation page, 2026.)
Teacher Passport
If you are already Conditionally accredited in NSW, the 2026 changes do not affect you. The new before-grant LANTITE rule applies to applications from 1 August 2026 onward. (Source: NESA, 2026.)
For everyone still on the pathway, the practical takeaway is to pass LANTITE early. Because the test now gates entry, not just graduation, leaving it late can block a Conditional placement, not only a final prac. ACER expects students to attempt LANTITE before the end of the first year of their ITE program, and that earlier-is-safer logic now matters more in NSW than it did. (Source: ACER, 2026.)
Two components (Literacy and Numeracy), each around 65 questions over two hours, administered by ACER. The pass standard is achievement equivalent to the top 30% of the Australian adult population in each component. There are four two-week test windows a year, no cap on attempts from 2025, and results do not expire and transfer between providers. (Source: ACER, 2026.)
For the wider NSW picture — timeframes, maintenance and fees — see the full NSW teacher accreditation guide at teacherpassport.com.au/nsw-teacher-accreditation. For the test itself, including when to sit it, start at teacherpassport.com.au/lantite.
Teacher Passport
Yes. You must pass both LANTITE components to hold active NESA accreditation, and you need active accreditation to teach in any NSW school. This applies across government, Catholic and independent schools, because NESA has been the single accreditation authority for all three since November 2022. There is no NSW alternative to the test.
Conditional accreditation lets you teach before you have finished your teaching qualification. It is for ITE students far enough through an approved degree (75% of credit points for an undergraduate course, 50% for a grad-entry course) and for degree-only entrants who hold a three-year bachelor's in a teaching subject area and have a non-casual job offer of at least one term. It is a stepping stone toward Provisional and then Proficient.
From 1 August 2026, you must have passed LANTITE before Conditional accreditation is granted. Two related changes started earlier, from 1 March 2026: the degree-only pathway now requires a formal, non-casual offer of at least one term, and conditionally accredited teachers must give NESA an annual course progression update until their degree is complete.
Both. LANTITE has always been required to graduate from an approved teaching degree, which is what gets you to Provisional accreditation. From 1 August 2026 it is additionally required up front for Conditional accreditation. The two gates are additive, not alternatives.
In urgent-staffing situations, yes. From 1 August 2026, a principal or employer can apply to NESA on your behalf to have Conditional accreditation granted before LANTITE is passed, by form emailed to ITApriority@nesa.nsw.edu.au. This is a case-by-case discretion, not a guaranteed window, and NESA does not publish a fixed length for the period to pass after it is granted.
No. If you already hold Conditional accreditation in NSW, the new before-grant LANTITE rule does not apply to you. The change applies to applications from 1 August 2026 onward.
Teacher Passport