GPA

GPA calculator with weighted and unweighted options.

Use this page to estimate semester GPA, compare unweighted versus weighted GPA, and project cumulative GPA after a new term. Because schools use different grade scales, this tool is for planning and self-checking rather than replacing an official transcript.

Course list

GPA resultAdd your classes, grades, and credits to estimate term GPA.

Cumulative GPA planner

Cumulative projectionEstimate how a new semester changes your running GPA.

Grade point table

LetterStandard 4.0Example weighted
A4.05.0
A-3.74.7
B+3.34.3
B3.04.0
C2.03.0
D1.02.0
F0.00.0
Weighted vs unweighted

Unweighted GPA usually caps at 4.0. Weighted GPA may add extra points for honors, AP, IB, or dual-enrollment courses, but every school sets its own policy.

How GPA works

Semester GPA and cumulative GPA are both credit-weighted averages. Multiply the grade points for each course by its credit hours, add those values, and divide by total graded credits.

Unweighted GPA ignores course difficulty boosts. Weighted GPA includes them if your school assigns extra grade points for advanced classes.

Semester GPA vs cumulative GPA

Semester GPA uses only the classes in one term. Cumulative GPA uses all included graded credits from your transcript. If one semester has more credits, it affects the cumulative GPA more strongly.

Worked examples

  1. Term GPA: A in 3 credits and B in 4 credits gives (4.0 * 3 + 3.0 * 4) / 7 = 3.43.
  2. Weighted term GPA: an honors A worth 5.0 in 3 credits and a standard B worth 3.0 in 4 credits gives (5 * 3 + 3 * 4) / 7 = 3.86.
  3. Cumulative projection: 30 completed credits at 3.2 GPA plus 15 new credits at 3.6 gives (30*3.2 + 15*3.6) / 45 = 3.33.
  4. Equal semester GPAs can mislead: a 12-credit semester at 4.0 and an 18-credit semester at 3.0 do not average to 3.5. Credit weighting matters.
  5. Percent to letter caution: a 92 may be an A- at one school and an A at another, so always check the local grading scale.

Common GPA mistakes

  • Averaging semester GPAs directly without considering credit totals.
  • Using the wrong plus/minus scale for your school.
  • Mixing weighted and unweighted numbers in the same comparison.
  • Assuming withdrawals, pass/fail classes, or transfer credits count the same everywhere.

FAQ

Can this page calculate percentage grades too?

It is better to convert percentages into letter grades based on your school's policy first. The grade-point mapping is what drives GPA.

Does this replace my school's official GPA?

No. Use it for planning and checking. Official GPA depends on the registrar's rules, repeated-course policies, and transcript conventions.

Why compare weighted and unweighted GPA?

It helps you understand how advanced-course policies affect the number, especially when comparing admissions criteria or scholarship thresholds.

Practice with Examples

Click any example below to see how different course combinations affect your GPA.

Cumulative
30 cr @ 3.2 + 15 cr @ 3.6
= 3.33 GPA
Cumulative
60 cr @ 3.5 + 12 cr @ 4.0
= 3.58 GPA
Cumulative
90 cr @ 3.8 + 15 cr @ 3.4
= 3.74 GPA
Cumulative
45 cr @ 3.0 + 15 cr @ 3.9
= 3.23 GPA
Cumulative
Senior year: 120 cr @ 3.7 + 12 cr
= 3.70 GPA
Freshman
First semester: 15 cr @ 3.5
= 3.50 GPA

Study advice

Track classes in a simple sheet while the term is in progress. Recording credits and grade points as you go makes final GPA checks fast and reduces last-minute mistakes. Related reading: How to Calculate GPA Step by Step and Weighted vs Unweighted GPA.