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The GPA (Grade Point Average) Calculator computes your cumulative, semester, or term GPA using the standard 4.0 scale by weighting each course grade by its credit hours. GPA is the universal academic performance metric used by colleges, graduate schools, employers, and scholarship committees in the United States. Each letter grade is assigned a numeric value (A=4.0, B=3.0, C=2.0, D=1.0, F=0.0), and the weighted average accounts for the fact that a grade in a 4-credit course should count more heavily than one in a 1-credit course. This calculator supports both unweighted and weighted GPA scales, including the +/- grading system used by many universities.
- 1Enter each course name (optional, for your reference) along with the letter grade received.
- 2Enter the credit hours for each course — typically 1-5 credits per course in US universities.
- 3The calculator converts each letter grade to its numeric equivalent on the 4.0 scale (A=4.0, A-=3.7, B+=3.3, B=3.0, etc.).
- 4Each grade point value is multiplied by the course's credit hours to produce quality points for that course.
- 5The total quality points across all courses are summed.
- 6The total credit hours across all courses are summed.
- 7GPA is calculated by dividing total quality points by total credit hours, rounded to two decimal places.
Quality points: A(4.0×3=12) + B+(3.3×3=9.9) + A-(3.7×4=14.8) + B(3.0×3=9.0) = 45.7. Total credits: 3+3+4+3 = 13. GPA = 45.7 / 13 = 3.515, rounds to 3.52.
Quality points: 12 + 12 + 9 + 16 + 0 = 49. Credits: 16. GPA = 49/16 = 3.06. A single F in a 3-credit class dropped this student from near 3.75 to 3.06 — demonstrating the outsized impact of failing grades.
Sem 1 quality points: 3.2 × 15 = 48. Sem 2: 3.6 × 16 = 57.6. Total: 105.6 / 31 credits = 3.406, rounds to 3.41. The higher-credit semester has slightly more pull.
Weighted: AP A=5.0, Honors B+=4.3, Regular A=4.0. (5.0+4.3+4.0)/3 = 4.43. Unweighted: A=4.0, B+=3.3, A=4.0. (4.0+3.3+4.0)/3 = 3.77. AP and Honors courses boost the weighted GPA above 4.0.
College admissions offices evaluating applicants — a minimum GPA (typically 2.5-3.5) is required for most four-year universities.
Graduate and professional school applications where GPA thresholds are strict (e.g., 3.0 minimum for most MBA programs, 3.5+ for top medical schools).
Scholarship committees using GPA cutoffs — many merit scholarships require 3.5+ and are renewed annually based on maintained GPA.
Employers in competitive fields (consulting, investment banking) who screen entry-level candidates by GPA, often requiring 3.3+.
Students on academic probation monitoring their GPA recovery to return to good standing (typically must reach 2.0 cumulative).
Pass/Fail and Credit/No Credit
Courses taken on a Pass/Fail (P/F) or Credit/No Credit (CR/NC) basis are typically excluded from GPA calculation. A 'Pass' earns credit hours but no quality points; a 'Fail' earns neither. Many students used expanded P/F options during COVID-19 to protect their GPAs, though some graduate programs view excessive P/F usage unfavorably.
Academic Bankruptcy / Fresh Start
Some universities offer 'academic bankruptcy' or 'fresh start' policies for students who performed poorly early in their academic career. This allows students (often after a gap of 3-5 years) to exclude earlier semesters from their GPA calculation, though the courses still appear on the transcript. Rules and eligibility vary widely by institution.
International GPA Conversion
Converting international grading scales to the US 4.0 system is not straightforward. A UK 'First' (70%+) roughly maps to a 4.0, while a German 1.0-1.5 maps to 4.0. WES (World Education Services) is the most commonly used credential evaluation service for international students applying to US schools.
| Letter Grade | Grade Points | Percentage (Typical) | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 4.0 | 93-100% | Excellent |
| A- | 3.7 | 90-92% | Excellent |
| B+ | 3.3 | 87-89% | Good |
| B | 3.0 | 83-86% | Good |
| B- | 2.7 | 80-82% | Above Average |
| C+ | 2.3 | 77-79% | Average |
| C | 2.0 | 73-76% | Average |
| C- | 1.7 | 70-72% | Below Average |
| D+ | 1.3 | 67-69% | Poor |
| D | 1.0 | 63-66% | Poor |
| D- | 0.7 | 60-62% | Minimal Passing |
| F | 0.0 | Below 60% | Failing |
What is a good GPA?
A 3.0 (B average) is generally considered acceptable, 3.5+ is considered strong, and 3.8+ is excellent. For context, the average college GPA in the US has risen to approximately 3.15 due to grade inflation.
Can my GPA go above 4.0?
On an unweighted scale, no — 4.0 is the maximum. On a weighted high school scale (used for AP/IB/Honors courses), GPAs can exceed 4.0, sometimes reaching 4.5 or even 5.0. Colleges typically recalculate on an unweighted 4.0 scale.
How much does one bad grade affect my GPA?
The impact depends on total credit hours earned. Early in college (30 credits), one F in a 3-credit course can drop your GPA by 0.3-0.4 points. Later (100+ credits), the same F might only lower it by 0.1. Grade replacement policies at some schools can mitigate this.
Does retaking a course replace the grade?
It depends on the school. Many allow grade replacement (only the new grade counts in GPA), some average both attempts, and others count both. Your transcript typically shows all attempts regardless. Check your specific school's policy.
What is Latin honors GPA?
Most US colleges award Latin honors at graduation: cum laude (typically 3.5+), magna cum laude (3.7+), and summa cum laude (3.9+). Exact thresholds vary by institution — some use class rank percentiles instead of fixed GPA cutoffs.
Is GPA or course rigor more important for college admissions?
Top colleges value course rigor (taking AP/IB/Honors when available) alongside GPA. A 3.7 in a rigorous schedule is generally viewed more favorably than a 4.0 with only basic courses. Admissions officers review both in context.
Pro Tip
If your GPA is below your target, focus on high-credit courses first — improving from B to A in a 4-credit course gains you 4.0 quality points, while the same improvement in a 1-credit course gains only 1.0. Also consider retaking your lowest-grade courses if your school offers grade replacement.
Did you know?
Grade inflation is real: the average college GPA has risen from 2.52 in 1950 to approximately 3.15 today. At some elite universities, the median grade is an A-minus, prompting debates about whether GPA remains a meaningful differentiator.