Weighted GPA Calculator — Free AP & Honors Support

Weighted GPA Calculator

Calculate your weighted and unweighted GPA with AP, Honors, IB, and Dual Enrollment course support.

Add Your Courses

Course Name
Credits
Grade
Course Type
Quality Pts

Weighted GPA

0.00

Unweighted GPA

0.00
0.00
Weighted GPA
0.00
Unweighted GPA
0
Total Credits
0.00
Quality Points

College Readiness Thresholds

Dean’s List
3.50
Cum Laude
3.50
Magna Cum Laude
3.70
Summa Cum Laude
3.90

What-If Scenarios

Course Impact on GPA

Share your result

Share on X

Embed This Calculator — Free

Add to your school website, blog, or LMS. No account needed.

You May Also Need

🎓

High School GPA Calculator

Calculate weighted and unweighted GPA for high school with AP, Honors, and IB support.

📊

Cumulative GPA Calculator

See how your weighted GPA across multiple semesters combines into your overall GPA.

📏

GPA Scale

Complete reference for 4.0, 4.3, and 5.0 weighted GPA scales with letter grade equivalents.

Weighted vs Unweighted GPA — What Colleges Actually See

Weighted GPA rewards course rigor by adding bonus points to grades in advanced courses, allowing GPAs to exceed 4.0. Unweighted GPA uses the standard 4.0 scale where all courses count equally. Most colleges consider both metrics — unweighted shows raw academic performance, weighted shows your willingness to challenge yourself. If you need a quick look at where letter grades fall on the 4.0 scale, our GPA scale reference breaks down every threshold.

Many admissions offices recalculate GPAs using their own formulas. Some universities only weight Honors courses (+0.5), while others weight both Honors and AP/IB courses (+1.0). The University of California system caps weighted points at 8 semesters. Knowing both your weighted and unweighted GPA helps you understand how colleges might evaluate your transcript. To see how one semester’s weighted GPA folds into your overall standing, the cumulative GPA calculator factors in all your prior credits.

The Formula

Weighted GPA = Σ((Grade Points + Bonus) × Credits) ÷ Total Credits

Bonus points: Regular courses = +0, Honors = +0.5, AP/IB/Dual Enrollment = +1.0

Unweighted GPA = Σ(Grade Points × Credits) ÷ Total Credits

Unweighted uses the standard 4.0 scale with no bonus points regardless of course type.

Worked Example

Maria takes 5 courses: AP Calculus (A, 4 credits), Honors English (B+, 3 credits), Regular History (A, 3 credits), AP Chemistry (A-, 4 credits), Regular PE (A, 1 credit).

Unweighted: (4.0×4 + 3.3×3 + 4.0×3 + 3.7×4 + 4.0×1) / 15 = 3.75

Weighted: (5.0×4 + 3.8×3 + 4.0×3 + 4.7×4 + 4.0×1) / 15 = 4.25

The 0.5 difference comes entirely from her AP and Honors courses. Colleges see both GPAs.

⚠️ Common Mistake: Adding AP bonus points to your percentage grade instead of your grade points. The bonus applies to the 4.0 scale (where A = 4.0), not to your 92% percentage. A 92% is an A, which becomes 5.0 on an AP weighted scale.

How AP, Honors, and IB Courses Affect Your Weighted GPA

Each course type contributes differently to your weighted GPA. Honors courses add 0.5 bonus points (capping an A at 4.5). AP, IB, and Dual Enrollment courses add 1.0 bonus point (allowing an A to reach 5.0). This weighting varies by school district — some cap weighted GPAs at 4.5 or 5.0, while others allow higher scales.

Importantly, a B in an AP course (4.0 weighted) equals an A in a regular course (4.0 unweighted) on the weighted scale. This means taking advanced courses and earning decent grades still boosts your weighted GPA significantly. Dropped below where you want to be? A GPA recovery plan maps out exactly how many A’s it takes to get back on track.

For Australian students at universities like UniMelb, Monash, and RMIT, weighted GPA isn’t used — instead they use WAM (Weighted Average Mark) from 0-100. Our Australia GPA calculator handles that conversion automatically.

💡 Pro Tip: Taking an AP class and earning a B (4.0 weighted) helps your weighted GPA more than earning an A in a Regular class (4.0 weighted). Colleges see both the rigor and the grade. Course difficulty matters as much as the grade itself.

Found this helpful? Share this calculator with a classmate or teacher — it’s free and always will be.

How to Cite This Page

Using this for a project? Copy a citation:

APA 7th:
MyGradeCalculator. (2026). Weighted GPA Calculator [Web application]. https://mygradecalculator.online/weighted-gpa-calculator/
MLA 9th:
“Weighted GPA Calculator.” MyGradeCalculator, mygradecalculator.online/weighted-gpa-calculator/.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you calculate a weighted GPA?
Multiply each course’s weighted grade points (base grade + bonus for AP/Honors/IB) by its credit hours, sum the products, then divide by total credits. Regular courses use the standard 4.0 scale, Honors add 0.5 points, and AP/IB/Dual Enrollment add 1.0 points. An A in AP is 5.0, in Honors is 4.5, in Regular is 4.0.
What is the difference between weighted and unweighted GPA?
Unweighted GPA uses a flat 4.0 scale where every course counts equally. Weighted GPA adds bonus points for advanced courses (0.5 for Honors, 1.0 for AP/IB), allowing scores above 4.0 up to about 5.0. Unweighted shows raw academic performance, weighted shows willingness to take challenging courses.
What is a good weighted GPA?
A weighted GPA of 4.0 or higher is generally considered good for competitive colleges. Top universities often see applicants with 4.3-4.5 weighted GPAs. A 3.5 weighted is solid for most state universities. Context matters though—a 4.0 weighted with five AP classes means more than a 4.0 weighted with no advanced courses.
How much does an AP class boost your GPA?
An AP class adds 1.0 to each grade’s point value on the weighted scale. An A goes from 4.0 to 5.0, a B from 3.0 to 4.0, a C from 2.0 to 3.0. This means even a B in an AP class (4.0 weighted) equals an A in a regular class. Honors courses add 0.5 instead of 1.0, capping at 4.5 for an A.
Do colleges look at weighted or unweighted GPA?
Most colleges consider both. Unweighted GPA shows your baseline academic performance, while weighted GPA demonstrates willingness to take challenging courses. Many admissions offices recalculate GPAs using their own formula. Course rigor matters as much as the GPA number itself. Colleges want to see both strong grades and challenging coursework.
How to calculate weighted GPA on a 4.0 scale?
Weighted GPA actually uses a 5.0 scale, not 4.0. The 4.0 scale refers to unweighted GPA. To convert weighted to an approximate 4.0 equivalent, calculate your unweighted GPA without bonus points. Use our weighted GPA calculator above to see both numbers instantly. Most colleges recalculate both metrics when evaluating applications.