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GPA Calculator: Calculate Your Grade Point Average

Weighted grade point average from your course grades and credit hours

EverydayBy Numora education teamReviewed by Numora academic standards teamUpdated 

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Assumptions
Your courses
GPA
Enter your values

Fill in the your courses to see your result.

GPA scales vary by institution. Some schools use +/− grades, others use whole letters only. Honors and AP courses often use a 5.0 scale. Check your institution's official policy.

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Quick takeaway

This GPA calculator helps students, parents, and educators quickly determine a weighted grade point average based on course grades and credit hours. It uses the standard 4.0 scale, which is widely adopted by high schools, colleges, and universities across the United States. By inputting individual course grades and their corresponding credit values, users can accurately compute their current or cumulative GPA. This tool is essential for tracking academic progress, understanding the impact of each course on overall standing, and planning for future academic goals such as scholarships, graduate school applications, or maintaining satisfactory academic progress for financial aid.

What is a gpa?

Use this GPA calculator to compute your grade point average on the standard US 4.0 scale. Add each course with its letter grade and credit hours — we apply the conventional weighted-by-credits formula and show your cumulative GPA, total points, and total credits. Works for high school, college, and graduate programs. The 4.0 scale and credit-weighting method follow the convention published by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. This tool helps students track academic performance, understand how individual grades impact their overall average, and plan for future academic goals like scholarships or graduate school applications. It's a quick way to project your GPA for the current semester or calculate your cumulative average across multiple terms.

The formula

GPA = Σ (grade_i · credits_i) ÷ Σ credits_i
  • g_igrade point value for course i (0.0 to 4.0)
  • c_icredit hours for course i

Source: Weighted Grade Point Average Formula (AACRAO Standard).

Worked examples

1Typical freshman semester

Inputs
courses: [object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
Walkthrough

Four courses — an A in one 3-credit class, an A− in another, a B+ in a 4-credit, and a B in a 3-credit. Total grade points: 12.0 + 11.1 + 13.2 + 9.0 = 45.3. Total credits: 13. GPA: 3.48. A solid first-semester result — on the high end of typical for a STEM freshman.

2Recovery semester

Inputs
courses: [object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
Walkthrough

All A's and one A− in a 13-credit semester. GPA: 3.93. A strong semester pulls cumulative GPA up slowly — if the previous semester was a 2.5 with the same credits, the cumulative only moves to about 3.2. GPA is harder to rescue than to preserve, which is why early semesters disproportionately matter.

3Challenging semester with a low grade

Inputs
courses: [object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
Walkthrough

This semester includes an A-, a B+, a C+, and a C-. Total grade points: 11.1 + 9.9 + 9.2 + 5.1 = 35.3. Total credits: 13. GPA: 2.72. This GPA is still above 2.0, but indicates a need for improvement to stay competitive for many programs.

How to use this calculator

  1. Your courses
  2. Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.

Common mistakes and edge cases

Forgetting that W (withdraw) and I (incomplete) usually don't count toward GPA. If you dropped a course mid-semester and received a W, leave it out entirely — don't enter 0 credits, remove the row.

Using unweighted GPA when your school reports weighted. High schools often add 0.5–1.0 to honors and AP grades. Entering AP grades on the unweighted 4.0 scale will under-report your weighted GPA by a quarter to half a point.

Averaging semester GPAs instead of recalculating from all courses. (3.0 + 3.5) / 2 is not your cumulative GPA unless the semesters had equal credits. Always sum grade points across all semesters, then divide by total credits.

Frequently asked questions

What counts as a good GPA?
Institution- and field-dependent. For graduate admissions, 3.5+ is competitive; for employment, 3.0+ is usually the cutoff employers list, though most stop caring a year after graduation. Honors designations typically kick in at 3.5 (cum laude) and 3.75 (magna cum laude).
How do I convert a percentage grade to GPA?
Most schools use: 90–100 = A (4.0), 80–89 = B (3.0), 70–79 = C (2.0), 60–69 = D (1.0), below 60 = F (0.0). Some use a sharper curve where an A starts at 93+. Check your institution's conversion table.
Does GPA matter for jobs?
Primarily for your first job out of school. Many employers screen for GPA above 3.0 or 3.5 for entry-level roles. After 2–3 years of work experience, almost no employer asks.
What is the difference between weighted and unweighted GPA?
An unweighted GPA treats all courses equally, with an A always being 4.0. A weighted GPA gives more points for grades in advanced courses like AP, IB, or honors classes, often on a 5.0 scale, to reflect their increased difficulty.
How do AP/IB courses affect GPA?
In high school, AP and IB courses often receive extra weight in GPA calculations. For example, an A in an AP class might count as 5.0 points instead of 4.0, boosting your weighted GPA. This varies by school.
Can I calculate my GPA if my school uses a different scale (e.g., 5.0)?
This calculator uses a standard 4.0 scale. If your school uses a 5.0 scale for weighted courses, you would need to adjust the grade point values accordingly or use a calculator specifically designed for that scale. For unweighted courses, a 5.0 scale usually means an A is 5.0, B is 4.0, etc.
What's the difference between semester GPA and cumulative GPA?
Semester GPA is your average grade for courses taken within a single academic term. Cumulative GPA is your overall average across all courses you've taken throughout your entire academic career at an institution.
How do pass/fail courses affect GPA?
Courses taken on a pass/fail basis typically do not factor into your GPA calculation. A 'Pass' grade usually grants credit but no grade points, while a 'Fail' grade might not grant credit and still not impact GPA, though policies vary.

GPA glossary

Credit hour
A unit of academic load. Traditionally defined as one hour of class per week over a semester — a 3-credit course meets 3 hours per week.
Grade points
The numeric value of a letter grade on the 4.0 scale. Multiplied by credit hours, grade points are what gets summed in GPA calculations.
Cumulative GPA
Your GPA across all courses ever taken, as opposed to a single semester's GPA. Only cumulative GPA appears on transcripts in most institutions.
Unweighted GPA
A GPA calculation where all courses, regardless of difficulty (e.g., AP, honors), are assigned the same maximum point value (typically 4.0 for an A).
Weighted GPA
A GPA calculation that assigns additional points to grades in more challenging courses, such as AP, IB, or honors classes, often on a 5.0 scale.
Academic Probation
A status assigned to students whose GPA falls below a certain threshold (often 2.0), indicating unsatisfactory academic performance and requiring improvement to avoid suspension.
Dean's List
An academic honor awarded to students who achieve a high GPA (typically 3.5 or higher) during a specific academic term, recognizing excellent performance.

How we built this calculator

Methodology

GPA is a weighted mean. Each course contributes its grade (converted to a 4.0-scale number) multiplied by its credit hours — a 3-credit A is worth three times the weight of a 1-credit A. Total grade points divided by total credits gives a number between 0.0 and 4.0 that represents your overall performance per credit hour.

This calculator was written by Numora education team and reviewed by Numora academic standards team before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.

Formula source
Weighted Grade Point Average Formula (AACRAO Standard)
Last reviewed
2026-04-24
Reviewer
Numora academic standards team
Calculation runs
Client-side only
NE
WRITTEN BY
Numora education team
NA
REVIEWED AND APPROVED BY
Numora academic standards team
In this review:
  • Verified the formula matches Weighted Grade Point Average Formula (AACRAO Standard) (1.0).
  • Confirmed the rounding rule applied by the engine: GPA is rounded to two decimal places. Intermediate calculations for total points and total credits are kept at higher precision before final division.
  • Recomputed all 3 worked examples by hand and confirmed the results match the engine.
  • Confirmed all 5 cited sources resolve to current pages on the issuing institution.
  • Validated all 2 test cases pass within the declared tolerance.

Reviewed on 2026-04-24 · Next review: 2027-04-24

See editorial policy

Sources & references

Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.

  1. American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO) - Grade Point Average Calculation GuidelinesINT
  2. College Board - Understanding Your GPAUSA
  3. National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) - Academic Progress and GradesUSA
  4. University of California System - Academic Policies on GradingUSA
  5. Council of Graduate Schools - Graduate Admissions and GPAUSA
  6. Numora Editorial Policy. numora.net/editorial-policy