GPA Calculator
Calculate your semester and cumulative GPA on the standard 4.0 scale. Add unlimited courses, include prior semester GPA, and see Dean's List eligibility instantly.
Prior Cumulative GPA (optional)
This Semester's Courses
Your GPA Results
Course Breakdown
| Course | Credits | Grade | Points | Quality Pts |
|---|
How GPA Is Calculated: A Complete Guide
Grade Point Average (GPA) is the standardized way colleges, graduate schools, and employers evaluate academic performance. It converts letter grades into a numerical scale (typically 0–4.0), weights them by the number of credit hours each course carries, and produces a single number that summarizes your academic standing. Understanding how GPA is calculated helps you plan strategically and set realistic targets.
GPA Formula
Semester GPA = Total Quality Points / Total Credit Hours
Quality Points = Grade Value × Credit Hours (per course)
Example: Biology (A, 4 credits) = 4.0 × 4 = 16.0 quality points
English (B+, 3 credits) = 3.3 × 3 = 9.9 quality points
History (A-, 3 credits) = 3.7 × 3 = 11.1 quality points
Total: 37.0 quality points / 10 credits = 3.70 GPA
The 4.0 Scale Explained
The 4.0 scale is used by nearly all US colleges and is the basis for most scholarship, honors, and admissions decisions. Some schools use a 4.3 scale (where A+ = 4.3), while others use a plus/minus system with additional granularity. This calculator uses the most common scale, shown in the reference table below. High schools may also use weighted GPA scales (typically 5.0 or 6.0) that give extra points for honors, AP, and IB courses — this calculator handles the standard unweighted 4.0 scale.
Standard 4.0 Grading Scale
| Letter Grade | Grade Points | Percentage | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 4.0 | 97–100% | Exceptional |
| 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 | 63–66% | Passing |
| D- | 0.7 | 60–62% | Barely Passing |
| F | 0.0 | Below 60% | Failing |
GPA Benchmarks and What They Mean
| GPA Range | Classification | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 3.7 – 4.0 | Summa Cum Laude range | Top graduate programs, prestigious scholarships |
| 3.5 – 3.69 | Magna Cum Laude / Dean's List | Competitive graduate admissions, most scholarships |
| 3.0 – 3.49 | Good Academic Standing | Many graduate programs, employer expectation for competitive roles |
| 2.5 – 2.99 | Average | Minimum for some graduate programs and internships |
| 2.0 – 2.49 | Below Average | Minimum for graduation at most institutions |
| Below 2.0 | Academic Probation | Risk of suspension or dismissal |
GPA and Career Outcomes: What the Research Says
A 2019 meta-analysis by Roth et al. published in the Journal of Applied Psychology analyzed 71 studies with over 48,000 participants and found a moderate positive correlation (r = 0.30) between college GPA and job performance, making GPA roughly as predictive as unstructured job interviews. The effect is strongest in the first two years after graduation and diminishes with career experience.
For graduate school admissions, GPA remains the single strongest numerical predictor of admission decisions. A 2022 analysis by Posselt in Equity in Science found that a GPA below 3.0 effectively disqualified applicants from most research-focused PhD programs, while a GPA above 3.5 significantly increased admission odds at competitive institutions — independent of GRE scores, which many programs have since dropped.
For employment, a 2023 survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) found that 42% of employers screen resumes by GPA, with 3.0 being the most common cutoff. However, this drops to 23% for employers hiring candidates with more than 3 years of experience, where skills and performance records dominate.
Strategies for Raising Your GPA
Prioritize high-credit courses. A 4-credit course impacts your GPA more than a 1-credit elective. If you're choosing between studying for a 4-credit Organic Chemistry exam and a 1-credit lab report, the chemistry exam has 4× the GPA impact.
Understand retake policies. Most colleges allow you to retake a course, with only the higher grade counting toward GPA (though both attempts may appear on the transcript). If you received a D in a 4-credit course, retaking it and earning a B improves that course's contribution from 4.0 quality points to 12.0 — a swing of 8 quality points.
Use pass/fail strategically. Many schools allow 1–2 courses per semester as pass/fail, which doesn't affect GPA. This is ideal for difficult electives outside your major where earning a C or lower is possible.
Front-load difficult courses. GPA is harder to raise than to maintain. If you have 90 credits at a 2.8 GPA, you would need to earn a 4.0 across 30 credits to reach a 3.1 — still below the 3.5 many scholarships require. Starting strong matters more than finishing strong.
Academic performance depends on physical and mental health fundamentals. Research consistently shows that adequate sleep (7–9 hours) improves memory consolidation and test performance by 20–40%. Proper nutrition and hydration support cognitive function. Regular exercise (tracked with Calories Burned) reduces stress and improves focus. Manage stress with our Stress Load Index.
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