GPA Calculator
Calculate your Grade Point Average. Enter your grades and credit hours to get your weighted GPA. Use this free math calculator for instant results. No signup.
How GPA is Calculated
GPA (Grade Point Average) is a weighted average of your grades, where each grade is first converted to grade points and then weighted by the credit hours of each course.
Formula: GPA = Σ(Grade Points × Credit Hours) / Σ(Credit Hours)
Step-by-step example:
| Course | Grade | Grade Points | Credit Hours | Quality Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculus | A | 4.0 | 4 | 16.0 |
| English | B+ | 3.3 | 3 | 9.9 |
| History | A− | 3.7 | 3 | 11.1 |
| Chemistry | B | 3.0 | 4 | 12.0 |
| PE | A | 4.0 | 1 | 4.0 |
| Total | 15 | 53.0 |
GPA = 53.0 / 15 = 3.53
Note how Calculus and Chemistry (4 credit hours each) are weighted more heavily than PE (1 credit hour). A poor grade in a 4-credit course hurts your GPA much more than the same grade in a 1-credit course.
Letter Grade to GPA Conversion Scale
The standard 4.0 scale used by most US colleges and universities:
| Letter Grade | 4.0 Scale | Percentage | Academic Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 4.0 | 97–100% | Outstanding |
| A | 4.0 | 93–96% | Excellent |
| A− | 3.7 | 90–92% | Excellent |
| B+ | 3.3 | 87–89% | Very 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% | Satisfactory |
| C− | 1.7 | 70–72% | Below Average |
| D+ | 1.3 | 67–69% | Poor |
| D | 1.0 | 60–66% | Barely Passing |
| F | 0.0 | Below 60% | Failing |
Note: Some schools do not award A+ grades (capping at 4.0), or award 4.3 for A+. Always check your institution's specific scale.
Cumulative GPA vs Semester GPA
Semester GPA is calculated using only the current semester's grades and credit hours. It gives you a snapshot of recent academic performance.
Cumulative GPA (overall GPA) is calculated across all completed semesters. It requires summing all quality points from all semesters and dividing by all credit hours completed.
Example: A student has:
- Semester 1: 12 credits, GPA 3.2 (quality points: 38.4)
- Semester 2: 15 credits, GPA 3.5 (quality points: 52.5)
- Semester 3: 15 credits, GPA 2.8 (quality points: 42.0)
Cumulative GPA = (38.4 + 52.5 + 42.0) / (12 + 15 + 15) = 132.9 / 42 = 3.16
The cumulative GPA is not the average of the semester GPAs — it must be recalculated from total quality points and total credit hours.
Weighted GPA vs Unweighted GPA
In high school, many districts use both weighted and unweighted GPA systems:
- Unweighted GPA (standard 4.0 scale): All courses are treated equally regardless of difficulty. An A in PE and an A in AP Calculus both count as 4.0.
- Weighted GPA (typical scale: 5.0): Advanced courses (AP, IB, Honors) are given a bonus. An A in an AP course = 5.0, Honors = 4.5, standard = 4.0.
| Course Type | A Grade Value | B Grade Value | C Grade Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | 4.0 | 3.0 | 2.0 |
| Honors | 4.5 | 3.5 | 2.5 |
| AP / IB | 5.0 | 4.0 | 3.0 |
College admissions officers often recalculate GPA using their own methodology, so a weighted 4.8 GPA at one school may be equivalent to a 3.9 unweighted GPA at another. When comparing students, colleges typically look at both weighted GPA in context of course rigor.
What GPA Do You Need? Graduate School, Jobs, and Scholarships
GPA requirements vary significantly by purpose:
| Purpose | Typical Minimum GPA | Competitive GPA |
|---|---|---|
| Most 4-year college transfers | 2.0 | 3.0+ |
| Medical school (MD) | 3.0 (rarely admitted) | 3.7–3.9 |
| Law school (top 14) | 3.5 | 3.8+ |
| MBA (top programs) | 3.0 | 3.5+ |
| PhD programs | 3.0–3.3 | 3.7+ |
| Cum Laude (most schools) | 3.5 | — |
| Magna Cum Laude | 3.7 | — |
| Summa Cum Laude | 3.9–4.0 | — |
| Federal employment (many roles) | No minimum | 3.0+ helpful |
| Major consulting firms (McKinsey, BCG) | 3.5 | 3.7+ |
Note that thresholds vary by institution. Some medical schools only consider applicants above 3.5; others admit students with 3.2 if other factors (MCAT, research, clinical hours) are exceptional.
How to Raise Your GPA: Practical Strategies
GPA recovery is possible with the right strategy, but it requires understanding the math:
The credit hour problem: GPA improvement gets harder the more credits you have accumulated. If you have completed 90 credits with a 2.8 GPA and want to graduate at 3.0, you need: to earn enough extra quality points. Starting from 90 credits (252 quality points at 2.8), you need to reach 3.0 at graduation (120 credits). You need 360 quality points total, so in your last 30 credits you need 108 quality points = 3.6 average in your final year. Doable, but requires consistent A/A- performance.
Practical improvement tactics:
- Retake failed courses: Many schools replace the old grade in GPA calculations. An F replaced with a B+ (3.3) dramatically helps.
- Target high-credit courses: A 4.0 in a 4-credit course is worth 4 times more quality points than a 4.0 in a 1-credit course. Focus effort on your major's core courses.
- Use Pass/Fail options wisely: Some schools allow P/F designation for electives — this can protect your GPA on risky courses while still earning credits.
- Seek academic support early: Office hours, tutoring centers, and study groups prevent poor grades rather than repair them.
GPA Scales Around the World
The 4.0 GPA scale is primarily a US and Canadian system. Most countries use different grading scales, making international credential evaluation complex:
| Country | Grading Scale | Top Grade | Passing Grade | Approximate US 4.0 Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States / Canada | 4.0 (letter grades) | A / 4.0 | D / 1.0 | 4.0 |
| United Kingdom | Classification system | First Class (70%+) | Third Class (40%+) | First ≈ 3.7–4.0 |
| Germany | 1.0–5.0 (1 is best) | 1.0 (sehr gut) | 4.0 (ausreichend) | 1.0 ≈ 4.0; 2.0 ≈ 3.0 |
| France | 0–20 | 20 (never awarded in practice) | 10 | 16+ ≈ 4.0; 14 ≈ 3.5 |
| India | 10-point CGPA or percentage | 10.0 / 100% | 4.0 / 40% | 9+ ≈ 3.7–4.0 |
| Australia | 7-point or HD/D/C/P/F | 7.0 / High Distinction | 4.0 / Pass | HD (7) ≈ 4.0; D (6) ≈ 3.5 |
| Japan | 4.0 (similar to US) or S/A/B/C/F | S or A / 4.0 | C / 1.0 | Directly comparable |
| South Korea | 4.5 or 4.3 scale | A+ / 4.5 or 4.3 | D / 1.0 | 4.3 KR ≈ 4.0 US |
| Brazil | 0–10 | 10 | 5 or 7 (varies) | 9+ ≈ 3.7–4.0 |
UK classification system explained: British universities don't use GPA in the traditional sense. Instead, degree classification is based on overall percentage across all assessed work:
- First Class Honours (1st): 70%+ — equivalent to summa/magna cum laude; approximately top 25% of graduates
- Upper Second Class (2:1): 60–69% — the most common "good" classification; minimum for most graduate programs
- Lower Second Class (2:2): 50–59% — acceptable but limits some career options
- Third Class (3rd): 40–49% — minimum passing classification
German grading (inverted scale): Germany uses a 1.0–5.0 scale where 1.0 is the best and 5.0 is failing. Grades above 4.0 are failing. A German student with a 1.3 average has approximately the same standing as a US student with a 3.8–4.0 GPA. The terms are: 1.0–1.5 = sehr gut (very good), 1.6–2.5 = gut (good), 2.6–3.5 = befriedigend (satisfactory), 3.6–4.0 = ausreichend (sufficient).
For international students applying to US graduate schools: Credential evaluation services (WES — World Education Services, ECE — Educational Credential Evaluators) convert foreign grades to the US 4.0 scale. This evaluation is typically required for admissions and can take 4–8 weeks. Plan ahead when applying.
GPA Inflation: Trends and Implications
Grade inflation — the gradual increase in average GPAs over time without a corresponding increase in student learning — is a well-documented phenomenon in American higher education:
The data: According to research by Stuart Rojstaczer (gradeinflation.com), the average college GPA in the US has risen from 2.52 in 1950 to 2.93 in 1990 to approximately 3.15 in 2024. At elite private universities, the average is even higher — Harvard's median grade is an A-minus, and approximately 80% of grades awarded are A-range.
Why it matters:
- Devaluation of high GPAs: When most students receive A's and B's, a 3.5 GPA no longer distinguishes top students. Graduate programs and employers must rely more on standardized tests, interviews, and portfolios.
- Inter-institution comparison challenges: A 3.8 at a school with rampant inflation may represent less mastery than a 3.4 at a school with rigorous grading. This is why selective graduate programs consider the reputation and grading norms of the undergraduate institution.
- STEM vs. humanities gap: Science and engineering courses typically grade more strictly than humanities courses. A 3.3 GPA in chemical engineering often represents stronger academic performance than a 3.7 in some social science fields. Medical and law schools increasingly weight "science GPA" separately.
What students should know: Grade inflation means that a "good" GPA threshold has shifted upward. In 1980, a 3.0 was clearly above average. Today, a 3.0 is barely average at many institutions. Aim for 3.5+ to be competitive for selective graduate programs and employers who filter by GPA.
Transfer Students and GPA: What You Need to Know
Transferring between institutions creates unique GPA challenges that many students don't anticipate:
GPA does not transfer: At most US colleges and universities, only credits transfer — not grades. When you transfer, your GPA at the new institution starts fresh at 0.0. Your previous courses appear on your transcript as transfer credits but don't factor into your new GPA calculation. This can be both an opportunity (a fresh start for students with low GPAs) and a challenge (high-GPA students lose their earned average).
Cumulative transcript GPA: While your institutional GPA resets, graduate schools and employers may calculate a cumulative GPA across all institutions attended. Medical school applications through AMCAS, for example, include grades from every college attended and calculate a combined GPA regardless of transfer status.
Community college to university transfers: This is the most common transfer path. Students who earn a strong GPA at community college (3.5+) are often competitive for admission to selective four-year universities. However, once transferred, they must maintain strong performance because their new university GPA starts from scratch with only upper-division courses — which are typically more challenging.
Strategic advice for transfer students:
- Research whether your target school accepts specific courses before enrolling in them
- Understand that not all credits may transfer — some courses may need to be retaken
- If your GPA at your first school was low, transferring offers a genuine reset for institutional GPA
- Keep records of all syllabi and course descriptions to facilitate credit evaluation
- For graduate school applications, be prepared to explain GPA discrepancies between institutions
Frequently Asked Questions
How is GPA calculated?
GPA = Total Quality Points ÷ Total Credit Hours. Quality points = grade points × credit hours for each course. An A (4.0) in a 3-credit course = 12 quality points. Sum all quality points, divide by sum of all credit hours.
What is a good GPA in college?
3.0 is generally considered the minimum 'good' GPA. 3.5+ is considered strong. 3.7+ is excellent and qualifies for most graduate programs. The average college GPA in the US is approximately 3.15. Context matters — a 3.5 in computer science is more impressive than a 3.9 in some easier programs.
What GPA do I need for medical school?
Most US MD programs look for a minimum 3.0, but competitive applicants average 3.7–3.9 science GPA and 3.7–3.8 overall. MCAT score, clinical experience, and research also matter significantly. DO programs are slightly less competitive, typically 3.4+ for competitive applicants.
Does GPA matter after you graduate?
Yes, for the first few years of your career, especially in fields like consulting, finance, law, and academia. Many top firms filter resumes below 3.5. After 2–3 years of work experience, GPA becomes much less important than actual professional accomplishments.
What is the difference between weighted and unweighted GPA?
Unweighted GPA uses a 4.0 scale where all courses are treated equally. Weighted GPA (typically 5.0 scale) gives bonus points for harder courses (AP, IB, Honors). Colleges typically recalculate using their own method, so the raw number matters less than context.
Can I raise my GPA in the last semester of college?
Yes, but the impact decreases the more credits you have completed. With 90 credits, your final 30 credits are just 25% of your total — even straight A's will move the needle modestly. Focus on achieving your minimum target rather than dramatic GPA swings in final semesters.
How do plus and minus grades affect GPA?
Plus and minus grades add precision: A = 4.0, A− = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, etc. An A− average (3.7) versus a straight A average (4.0) makes a meaningful difference. If your school uses plus/minus grading, being in the upper portion of a grade band (e.g., 89% vs 81%) significantly impacts your GPA.
Does repeating a course replace the original grade in GPA?
It depends on your school's policy. Many colleges have 'grade forgiveness' or 'grade replacement' policies that substitute the new grade for the old in GPA calculations (though the original grade may still appear on the transcript). Some schools average both attempts. Check your registrar's policy before retaking a course for GPA improvement.