i-Ready Placement Levels: Below Grade, On Grade, Above Grade Explained
iReady Placement Levels Explained — Complete Parent Guide
By Stephanie Smith, M.Ed. · Updated 2026 · 12 min read
Your child’s iReady Diagnostic report assigns them to one of five placement levels — from Well Below Grade Level to Well Above Grade Level. This guide explains exactly what each level means, what the school should be doing, and what you as a parent can do right now. It also covers the single most important thing most parents misunderstand: being On Grade Level does not mean the same thing as scoring at the national average.
Well Below Grade Level
Below Grade Level
On Grade Level
Above Grade Level
Well Above Grade Level
Score Cutoff Tables
FAQ
Jump to any section. Or use the free iReady Score Calculator to instantly look up your child’s percentile and placement level by score.
What Are iReady Placement Levels?
iReady Placement Levels are five categories that describe how a student’s scale score compares to the skills expected at their grade level at a specific point in the school year. They are assigned by Curriculum Associates based on criterion-referenced cut scores — thresholds that represent what a student needs to have mastered to be considered on track for their grade.
The five levels are Well Below Grade Level, Below Grade Level, On Grade Level, Above Grade Level, and Well Above Grade Level. Each level applies separately to Math and Reading, and the cut scores that define each level shift with every testing season as grade-level expectations rise throughout the year.
For a complete breakdown of what your child’s specific scale score means as a national percentile and placement level, use our free iReady Score Calculator. For the full percentile charts by grade, see the iReady Math Score Chart and iReady Reading Score Chart.
Being On Grade Level does NOT mean scoring at the 50th percentile nationally. iReady’s placement levels are criterion-referenced — they are set based on what skills a student needs to have mastered, not based on where the average student actually scores. In most grades and seasons, the On Grade Level threshold starts around the 40th percentile. A student can be below the national average and still be On Grade Level. A student can be above the national average and still be in the lower portion of the On Grade Level band. Both things are true and neither is contradictory. Understanding this distinction will change how you read every iReady report your child ever brings home.
How Placement Levels Change by Season
iReady tests three times per year — Fall, Winter, and Spring — and the score thresholds for each placement level are different in each window. The bar rises as the year progresses because grade-level expectations grow as students learn through the school year.
Here is what that means in practice. A 3rd grader who scores 440 in Math is On Grade Level in Fall. That same score of 440 in Spring would place them Below Grade Level — not because they went backwards, but because the On Grade Level threshold rose over the course of the year. This is why the testing season on the report matters as much as the score itself, and why our iReady Score Calculator always asks for the season before calculating.
When tracking progress, always compare Fall to Fall, Winter to Winter, or Spring to Spring from one year to the next. Comparing a Fall score to a Spring score from the same year can give a misleading picture of how much ground has been covered. Our iReady Growth Tracker helps you do this comparison correctly.
Well Below Grade Level
Approximately below the 20th percentile nationally
A Well Below Grade Level placement means the diagnostic has identified significant gaps in foundational skills — gaps that likely go back one or more grade levels below the student’s current enrolled grade. This is the level that warrants the most immediate and intensive attention, and it is the level where school-based intervention support matters most.
It is also important to put this result in context. A Well Below Grade Level placement in Fall, with a full year of targeted support ahead, is a very different situation from the same placement in Spring after a full year of instruction. Fall is the most actionable time to receive this result. Spring is the time to plan aggressively for the following year.
What the school should be doing:
A school using iReady correctly treats it as an RTI (Response to Intervention) and MTSS (Multi-Tiered System of Supports) screener. A Well Below Grade Level result should already be triggering Tier 2 or Tier 3 support — small group instruction targeting the specific skill domains the diagnostic identified as weakest. If that support is not in place, you have the right to ask for it directly.
What to do as a parent:
- Ask the teacher for the domain breakdown — not just the overall placement level. You need to know which specific skill areas scored lowest, because that is what targeted practice needs to address.
- Ask directly: is my child currently receiving Tier 2 or Tier 3 support? If not, ask what the process is to access it. Schools are required to respond to this question.
- Request a teacher meeting rather than an email exchange. A Well Below placement warrants a real conversation and a shared action plan.
- Start 15-20 minutes of daily targeted practice at home in the specific domains identified. Short and consistent beats long and irregular every time.
- Use Khan Academy organized by skill level — not by grade — so practice targets exactly what the diagnostic flagged rather than reviewing an entire grade’s content.
- If a Well Below placement persists across two or more testing windows despite support, ask the teacher about a formal evaluation referral through the school’s Child Study or Student Support Team.
Below Grade Level
Approximately 20th to 39th percentile nationally
A Below Grade Level placement means the diagnostic has identified skill gaps relative to grade-level expectations — the student is below average nationally and below the criterion standard for their grade, but the gap is real and addressable rather than severe. The vast majority of students who move from Below Grade Level to On Grade Level over a school year do so through consistent, targeted support both at school and at home.
One thing worth knowing about the Below Grade Level band: the lower portion (around the 20th-27th percentile) and the upper portion (around the 34th-39th percentile) are meaningfully different situations. A student near the top of this band is close to the On Grade Level threshold and may close the gap relatively quickly with targeted effort. A student near the bottom needs more intensive support. Our calculator distinguishes between these sub-positions in its output precisely because this distinction matters.
What the school should be doing:
At minimum, teachers should be using the domain breakdown from the diagnostic to provide differentiated instruction targeting the specific weak areas. Depending on the severity of the gap and the grade level, small group support may also be appropriate.
What to do as a parent:
- Ask the teacher for the domain breakdown. A Below Grade Level result is specific, not global — some skill areas will be weaker than others and that is what home practice should target.
- For Reading gaps: identify whether vocabulary, comprehension, or foundational skills are the primary issue. Each requires a different approach at home.
- For Math gaps: ask which of the five domains (Number Operations, Algebraic Thinking, Fractions, Measurement, Geometry) is driving the lower score.
- Compare the current score to the previous testing window. Growth matters as much as the current level — a student gaining points consistently is moving in the right direction even if the label has not changed yet.
- Ask the teacher: at what pace does my child need to grow to reach On Grade Level by the next testing window, and is that pace realistic with current support?
On Grade Level
Approximately 40th to 74th percentile nationally
On Grade Level is the most important level for parents to understand clearly, because it is also the most frequently misread. A student who is On Grade Level has mastered the skills expected for their grade at the current point in the school year. That is a genuine achievement and should be treated as such.
What confuses many parents is that the On Grade Level band spans from roughly the 40th to the 74th percentile — meaning a child can be below the national average (below the 50th percentile) and still be On Grade Level. This is not a contradiction. It is the result of iReady setting its On Grade Level threshold based on what skills a student needs to have mastered, not where the average student happens to score. The fact that many students score below this bar in Fall is a feature of setting a genuine standard, not a flaw in the system.
There is also a meaningful difference between the lower portion of On Grade Level (around the 40th-49th percentile) and the upper portion (around the 65th-74th percentile). A student at the lower end is meeting the standard but has clear room to grow. A student at the upper end is performing solidly above the national average and approaching the Above Grade Level threshold.
What the school should be doing:
For On Grade Level students, teachers use the domain breakdown to guide differentiated instruction and ensure the student maintains their position while addressing any specific weak domains. The goal is steady growth across all three testing windows.
What to do as a parent:
- Celebrate first. On Grade Level means your child is meeting expectations. That matters.
- Ask the teacher which specific domains within Math or Reading have the most room for improvement — even On Grade Level students typically have one or two weaker areas worth targeting.
- Focus on steady, consistent practice rather than intensive review. The goal at this level is maintaining the trajectory and ideally moving into the upper portion of the band.
- Use the iReady Growth Tracker to monitor growth across Fall, Winter, and Spring and make sure your child is keeping pace with typical growth expectations.
- If your child is in the lower On Grade Level band, ask whether targeted practice in any specific domain could help them move toward the midpoint of the band by the next window.
Above Grade Level
Approximately 75th to 89th percentile nationally
An Above Grade Level placement means your child has mastered the skills expected for their enrolled grade and is already working into content typically taught in the following grade year. This is a strong result in any testing window and reflects genuine academic preparation beyond grade-level expectations.
The priority for students at this level is maintaining their trajectory and continuing to grow, not simply holding position. A student who reaches Above Grade Level in Fall and stays at the same percentile through Spring is technically performing well but is not growing at the same rate as their national peers. Growth matters at every level.
What the school should be doing:
Teachers should be providing enrichment and challenge content that extends beyond the standard grade-level curriculum for students at this level. iReady’s diagnostic identifies specific domains where even advanced students have room to deepen rather than simply advance.
What to do as a parent:
- Ask the teacher about enrichment opportunities, advanced problem sets, or challenge content available at school that goes beyond the standard curriculum.
- Ask which domains have the most room to grow even at this level — strengthening weaker areas within the Above band sets up a stronger trajectory toward Well Above.
- Encourage independent reading, math exploration, or subject-specific enrichment outside school.
- If your child is close to the Well Above Grade Level threshold, discuss with the teacher what that might mean for placement and programming options next year.
- Monitor growth across windows using the iReady Growth Tracker to confirm your child is continuing to advance.
Well Above Grade Level
Approximately 90th percentile and above nationally
A Well Above Grade Level placement means your child is in the top 10% of same-grade students nationally and has mastered content well beyond what is expected for their enrolled grade. In many cases these students are working at or near the content of one or two grade levels above their enrolled year.
The most important conversation to have at this level is about academic challenge. The standard classroom curriculum may not be providing enough stretch for a student consistently performing in this range. Well Above Grade Level across two or more testing windows is one of the strongest evidence-based arguments for gifted program evaluation, subject-level acceleration, or enrichment programming.
What the school should be doing:
At this level, the school should be considering enrichment programming, gifted screening, or advanced coursework options. If these conversations have not happened, this result is a concrete basis for initiating them.
What to do as a parent:
- Ask the teacher about gifted program screening, enrichment opportunities, or academic acceleration if that conversation has not already happened.
- Ask specifically: is the standard curriculum providing enough challenge for my child at this level?
- Consider subject-specific enrichment outside school — math competitions, advanced reading programs, independent research projects, or creative writing.
- Monitor growth to ensure your child is continuing to advance, not just holding position. Even Well Above Grade Level students should be showing growth across testing windows.
- Advocate confidently for your child’s access to appropriate academic challenge. This level of performance is strong evidence of readiness for more demanding content.
When Math and Reading Levels Are Different
It is very common for a student to be at different placement levels in Math and Reading. In fact, it is more common than identical placements in both subjects. Having different levels does not indicate a problem — it indicates a learning profile worth understanding clearly.
If Math is stronger than Reading: Strong math skills are an asset, and the Reading gap is worth focused attention. Reading underpins academic performance across all subjects as students advance through school — history, science, and social studies all become increasingly text-dependent. Ask the teacher for the Reading domain breakdown specifically, so practice can target vocabulary, comprehension, or foundational skills depending on where the gap actually sits.
If Reading is stronger than Math: Ask the teacher for the Math domain breakdown — which of the five Math goal areas (Number Operations, Algebraic Thinking, Fractions, Measurement, Geometry) is the primary gap? Knowing this narrows home practice from “general Math review” to targeted work on the specific skill that needs it most.
If there is a large discrepancy between subjects — for example, Well Above Grade Level in one and Below Grade Level in the other — it is worth asking the teacher whether this pattern is consistent with classroom observations and whether any evaluation might be appropriate. A large discrepancy can sometimes reflect a specific learning profile that benefits from evaluation and targeted support. Our free calculator handles both Math and Reading in the same session and produces a combined interpretation for exactly this scenario.
iReady Placement Level Score Cutoffs by Grade 2025-2026
The tables below show the scale score ranges for each placement level by grade and testing season. To find your child’s placement level, locate their grade and season, then find where their scale score falls in the table. For the full national percentile tables for every score, see our Math Score Chart and Reading Score Chart.
Math Placement Cutoffs — Fall
| Grade | Well Above | Above | On Grade | Below | Well Below |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindergarten | 361+ | 340–360 | 326–339 | 316–325 | Below 316 |
| Grade 1 | 395+ | 374–394 | 359–373 | 349–358 | Below 349 |
| Grade 2 | 420+ | 398–419 | 383–397 | 372–382 | Below 372 |
| Grade 3 | 446+ | 423–445 | 406–422 | 394–405 | Below 394 |
| Grade 4 | 471+ | 447–470 | 428–446 | 416–427 | Below 416 |
| Grade 5 | 491+ | 466–490 | 447–465 | 434–446 | Below 434 |
| Grade 6 | 509+ | 483–508 | 463–482 | 449–462 | Below 449 |
| Grade 7 | 526+ | 498–525 | 477–497 | 462–476 | Below 462 |
| Grade 8 | 541+ | 512–540 | 490–511 | 474–489 | Below 474 |
Math Placement Cutoffs — Winter
| Grade | Well Above | Above | On Grade | Below | Well Below |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindergarten | 383+ | 361–382 | 345–360 | 333–344 | Below 333 |
| Grade 1 | 418+ | 395–417 | 378–394 | 366–377 | Below 366 |
| Grade 2 | 441+ | 418–440 | 401–417 | 389–400 | Below 389 |
| Grade 3 | 466+ | 443–465 | 424–442 | 411–423 | Below 411 |
| Grade 4 | 490+ | 465–489 | 444–464 | 431–443 | Below 431 |
| Grade 5 | 509+ | 483–508 | 463–482 | 449–462 | Below 449 |
| Grade 6 | 526+ | 499–525 | 479–498 | 464–478 | Below 464 |
| Grade 7 | 542+ | 514–541 | 492–513 | 476–491 | Below 476 |
| Grade 8 | 557+ | 527–556 | 504–526 | 487–503 | Below 487 |
Math Placement Cutoffs — Spring
| Grade | Well Above | Above | On Grade | Below | Well Below |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindergarten | 404+ | 381–403 | 363–380 | 349–362 | Below 349 |
| Grade 1 | 436+ | 412–435 | 393–411 | 380–392 | Below 380 |
| Grade 2 | 458+ | 434–457 | 416–433 | 403–415 | Below 403 |
| Grade 3 | 482+ | 458–481 | 438–457 | 425–437 | Below 425 |
| Grade 4 | 505+ | 479–504 | 458–478 | 444–457 | Below 444 |
| Grade 5 | 523+ | 497–522 | 476–496 | 461–475 | Below 461 |
| Grade 6 | 540+ | 513–539 | 491–512 | 476–490 | Below 476 |
| Grade 7 | 556+ | 527–555 | 504–526 | 488–503 | Below 488 |
| Grade 8 | 570+ | 540–569 | 516–539 | 499–515 | Below 499 |
Reading Placement Cutoffs — Fall
| Grade | Well Above | Above | On Grade | Below | Well Below |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindergarten | 366+ | 344–365 | 329–343 | 318–328 | Below 318 |
| Grade 1 | 413+ | 388–412 | 370–387 | 357–369 | Below 357 |
| Grade 2 | 458+ | 432–457 | 413–431 | 399–412 | Below 399 |
| Grade 3 | 496+ | 469–495 | 449–468 | 435–448 | Below 435 |
| Grade 4 | 520+ | 492–519 | 471–491 | 456–470 | Below 456 |
| Grade 5 | 542+ | 513–541 | 491–512 | 476–490 | Below 476 |
| Grade 6 | 562+ | 532–561 | 509–531 | 494–508 | Below 494 |
| Grade 7 | 581+ | 550–580 | 526–549 | 510–525 | Below 510 |
| Grade 8 | 599+ | 567–598 | 542–566 | 525–541 | Below 525 |
Source: Curriculum Associates iReady official placement tables 2025-2026. Curriculum Associates confirmed no changes to placement score cutoffs between 2024-2025 and 2025-2026 school years. Winter and Spring Reading cutoff tables follow the same seasonal rise pattern — for the complete interactive lookup use the free iReady Score Calculator.
Frequently Asked Questions About iReady Placement Levels
Is On Grade Level the same as average? +
Why do placement levels change between Fall and Spring? +
What should I do if my child is Below Grade Level? +
Can a child move from Below Grade Level to On Grade Level in one year? +
What does Well Above Grade Level mean for gifted services? +
Are iReady placement levels the same as iReady curriculum levels (Level A, B, C)? +
How do iReady placement levels relate to state test proficiency? +
What is a good iReady score for my child’s grade? +
What is the difference between placement levels and growth targets? +
Do iReady placement levels change with the 2026-2027 school year? +
About the Author
Stephanie Smith is the Lead Writer and Editorial Head of the Readyscores.com Editorial Team. She is a former district-level assessment coordinator with 18 years in public education and a recognised expert in iReady Diagnostic scores and NWEA MAP Test scores interpretation. She has trained educators across multiple states in score interpretation, growth analysis, and instructional response to student data.
Disclaimer: This guide is an independent educational resource maintained by Readyscores.com. Readyscores.com is not affiliated with or endorsed by Curriculum Associates LLC. iReady and iReady Inform are registered trademarks of Curriculum Associates LLC. All placement level cutoff data is sourced from Curriculum Associates official published placement tables for 2025-2026. For official guidance about your child’s specific results contact your school or district directly.
