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Calculate your GPA, CGPA, and SGPA with support for multiple grading systems (4.0, 10.0, percentage). Track semesters, plan goals, calculate weighted grades for Honors/AP courses, and export your data.
Cumulative GPA
0.00
Total Credits
0
Semesters
1
Total Courses
1
Select your grading system and preferences
AP: +1.0, Honors: +0.5 bonus points
SGPA: 4.00 | Credits: 3
Points
4.00
Calculate what you need for your target GPA
Goal is Achievable!
To reach a 3.5 GPA, you need approximately a 3.40 GPA in your next semester (assuming 15 credits).
Focus on improving grades in core subjects for better outcomes.
GPA is a standardized way of measuring academic achievement. It converts letter grades into numerical values and calculates an average based on credit hours. The most common scale is 4.0, where A=4.0, B=3.0, C=2.0, D=1.0, and F=0.0.
GPA = Σ(Grade Points × Credits) / Σ(Credits)
Your overall GPA across all semesters combined. This is what appears on transcripts and is used for graduation honors.
Your GPA for a single semester. Useful for tracking term-by-term performance and identifying trends.
Excellent (A grade, 4.0 GPA)
Good (B grade, 3.0 GPA)
Average (C grade, 2.0 GPA)
Below Average (D grade, 1.0 GPA)
Fail (F grade, 0.0 GPA)
GPA is calculated by multiplying each grade point by the course credit hours, summing all results, and dividing by total credit hours.
• Course 1: A (4.0) × 3 credits = 12 points
• Course 2: B (3.0) × 4 credits = 12 points
• Course 3: A- (3.7) × 3 credits = 11.1 points
Total: 35.1 points ÷ 10 credits = 3.51 GPA
Represent the weight of each course. Typically 1-4 credits per course, with labs often having 0.5-1 credit.
Numerical value assigned to letter grades. A=4.0, B=3.0, C=2.0, D=1.0, F=0.0 in standard 4.0 scale.
Grade points multiplied by credit hours. This weighted value determines overall GPA impact.
Honors courses typically add +0.5 bonus points to the grade. An A in an Honors course becomes 4.5 instead of 4.0.
AP courses add +1.0 bonus point. An A in an AP course becomes 5.0, reflecting the college-level difficulty.
Typically 2.0+ GPA (open admission policies)
Usually 3.0-3.5 GPA for admission
Expect 3.5-4.0+ GPA with strong coursework
Require 3.8+ unweighted or 4.3+ weighted GPA
Typically require 3.5+ GPA for consideration
Often need 3.8-4.0+ GPA plus other achievements
Usually 3.5+ GPA per semester
Typically 3.0-3.5+ GPA depending on institution
Most programs require 3.0+ GPA, competitive programs want 3.5+
Calculate what grades you need to reach your target GPA
Improving grades in 4-credit courses has bigger impact than 1-credit courses
Many schools allow grade replacement for failed courses
More A's dilute the impact of previous poor grades
Regular attendance correlates strongly with better grades
Get help from professors and TAs when struggling
Collaborative learning improves understanding and retention
Create study schedules and prioritize difficult subjects
To calculate GPA, multiply each course grade point by its credit hours, sum all the results, and divide by total credit hours. For example: If you have Course A (4.0 grade × 3 credits = 12) and Course B (3.0 grade × 4 credits = 12), your GPA = (12+12)/(3+4) = 3.43. Our calculator automates this process for multiple courses and semesters.
GPA (Grade Point Average) is a general term for your grade average. SGPA (Semester GPA) is your GPA for a single semester. CGPA (Cumulative GPA) is your overall GPA across all semesters combined. For example, if you have SGPA of 3.5 in Semester 1 and 3.7 in Semester 2 (with equal credits), your CGPA would be 3.6.
Unweighted GPA uses a standard 4.0 scale where A=4.0, B=3.0, etc. Weighted GPA adds bonus points for advanced courses: typically +0.5 for Honors courses and +1.0 for AP/IB courses. So an A in an AP course would be 5.0 instead of 4.0. Weighted GPA can exceed 4.0, while unweighted GPA maxes at 4.0.