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“The right choice depends on your age, your timelines, and whether you need a year mark or can focus on an exam-only route,” he explains.
Yes. ASC results are based 100% on the final exams written in May/June and marked by the Department of Basic Education, with results typically released around August.
On the other hand, NSC combines internal school-based assessment (SBA) with external exams.
“If you work full-time or can’t manage continuous assessment, ASC’s exam-only structure is often the practical route,” Moloisane said.
ASC is designed for adults (generally 21+), including those who never completed school or who want to improve subjects, while NSC is the standard school-leaver route, typically completed through a full-time school programme.
3) How many subjects are required?
ASC: Six subjects, including two official languages.
NSC: Seven subjects in the school programme (language rules apply, plus life orientation).
Language subjects, Mathematics or Mathematical Literacy, and high-demand options such as Life Sciences. Adults targeting healthcare and related fields often choose Life Sciences because it supports tertiary entry requirements in those pathways.
“Life Sciences is a frequent choice among adult learners aiming for further study in medical and health-related tracks,” Moloisane said. “Your subject mix should reflect where you want to go next.”
ASC: Register, prepare, write in May/June, receive results in August.
NSC: Year-round SBAs plus final exams at the end of the school year.
A structured self-study plan built around past papers, worked memos, and exam-style assignments.
Both ASC and NSC are recognised school-leaving qualifications. Tertiary admission depends on subject combinations and marks set by each institution or programme. For work, employers typically recognise both, provided the results meet job or programme thresholds.
“South Africa’s unemployment crisis requires pathways that lead to real opportunity,” Moloisane said. “A matric certificate is the first, most practical step on that path, unlocking access to further study, recognised skills, and work. Finish matric, and you move from hope to eligibility, and from eligibility to economic participation.”