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Free GPA Calculator

Enter your courses, grades, and credit hours. Your GPA calculates instantly — no account, no signup, no friction.

Works for college, high school, and graduate programs · Standard 4.0 scale

GPA Calculator

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All GPA Calculators

Specialized tools for every scenario — from high school AP classes to graduate school planning.

What is GPA?

GPA stands for Grade Point Average — a single number that summarizes your academic performance across all courses. In the United States, nearly every college and high school uses the 4.0 scale, where an A equals 4.0 points, a B equals 3.0, a C equals 2.0, a D equals 1.0, and an F equals 0.

To calculate your GPA, multiply each course's grade points by its credit hours to get quality points. Sum the quality points for all courses, then divide by the total number of credit hours completed. This weighted average ensures that a 4-credit calculus course counts more toward your GPA than a 1-credit elective.

There are two common types of GPA. An unweighted GPA treats every course the same — an A in gym class and an A in AP Physics both contribute 4.0 points. A weighted GPA rewards academic rigor: AP courses typically add 1.0 bonus points, and Honors courses add 0.5, pushing the maximum above 4.0.

GPA thresholds matter for scholarships, honor societies, graduate school admission, and dean's list eligibility. Most colleges require a minimum 2.0 GPA to remain in good standing. A 3.5 GPA typically qualifies for the Dean's List, while a 3.7+ is competitive for graduate programs and academic honors. Top-tier graduate schools often expect a 3.5–3.9 undergraduate GPA.

This free GPA calculator handles all the math in real time. Enter your course grades and credit hours, and your semester and cumulative GPA appear instantly — no signup, no hidden costs.

Letter GPA Points Percentage Standing
A / 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% Good
C+ 2.3 77–79% Satisfactory
C 2.0 73–76% Satisfactory
D 1.0 60–69% Below Average
F 0.0 < 60% Failing

Note: Exact percentage cutoffs vary by institution. P (Pass), NP (No Pass), W (Withdrawal), and I (Incomplete) grades are excluded from GPA calculations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about GPA calculation.

Multiply each course's grade points by its credit hours to get quality points. Sum all quality points, then divide by total credit hours. For example, an A (4.0) in a 3-credit course gives 12 quality points. Add all quality points across courses and divide by total credits for your GPA.

A GPA of 3.0 or above is generally considered good and meets most academic requirements. A 3.5 or above often qualifies for the Dean's List and is competitive for graduate school applications. A 3.7 or above is considered excellent and can qualify for honors like Magna Cum Laude. Aim for 3.0+ to stay in good standing.

Most colleges require a minimum GPA of 2.0 for admission consideration. Competitive state universities typically look for 3.0–3.5. Highly selective schools like the Ivy League expect an unweighted GPA of approximately 3.9. Graduate programs generally require a 3.0+ undergraduate GPA. Check each school's specific requirements.

Use the GPA Calculator above — enter each course's grade and credit hours, and your GPA is computed instantly. For your official GPA, check your school's student portal or transcript. This calculator uses the standard 4.0 scale and works for semester, annual, and cumulative calculations.

It depends on how many credits you already have completed. More existing credits means each new semester has less impact. Use the What If GPA Calculator to simulate exactly how specific grades in future courses would change your cumulative GPA. It accounts for your current credit hours and GPA automatically.

Yes — the What If GPA Calculator lets you enter your current GPA and credits, then add planned or hypothetical courses to see your projected GPA instantly. This is ideal for goal-setting before a semester or for understanding what grades you'd need to reach a target GPA like 3.5 or 3.7.

The 4.0 scale is the standard U.S. grade point system: A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, B- = 2.7, C+ = 2.3, C = 2.0, C- = 1.7, D+ = 1.3, D = 1.0, D- = 0.7, F = 0.0. Some schools also award A+ = 4.0 (or 4.3 on some scales). Pass (P) and Withdrawal (W) grades are excluded from GPA calculation.

A weighted GPA gives extra grade points for rigorous coursework. AP courses typically add +1.0 points, Honors courses add +0.5, and IB courses add +1.0. This means an A in an AP class counts as 5.0 instead of 4.0, pushing the maximum above 4.0. Weighted GPAs are common in high school and used to reward students who challenge themselves with advanced courses.

An unweighted GPA uses the standard 4.0 scale for all courses regardless of difficulty — an A is always 4.0. A weighted GPA applies bonuses for honors, AP, or IB courses, so the scale typically goes up to 5.0. Colleges often recalculate GPAs on an unweighted basis for fair comparison, but weighted GPA shows academic rigor in your transcript.

Focus on high-credit courses first — a strong grade in a 4-credit class moves your GPA more than the same grade in a 1-credit class. If your school allows grade replacement, retaking courses where you earned a D or F can significantly improve your cumulative GPA. Use the What If GPA Calculator to model exactly what grades you need to hit your target. Consistent study habits, office hours, and early tutoring are the most reliable long-term strategies.

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