USA GPA Calculator
Calculate your GPA on the American 4.0 scale. Includes standard and weighted modes for both college and high school students, with instant results, charts, and what-if projections.
USA GPA Calculator
Enter your courses with credit hours and letter grades. Your GPA updates automatically.
For high school students: select course level (Regular, Honors, AP/IB) to calculate weighted GPA on a 5.0 scale.
Your GPA Results
Academic Thresholds
What-If Scenarios
Credit Distribution
Quality Point Contributions
Grade Performance
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US GPA 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% | Very Good |
| B+ | 3.3 | 87 – 89% | Good |
| B | 3.0 | 83 – 86% | Above Average |
| B- | 2.7 | 80 – 82% | Satisfactory |
| C+ | 2.3 | 77 – 79% | Average |
| C | 2.0 | 73 – 76% | Adequate |
| C- | 1.7 | 70 – 72% | Below Average |
| D+ | 1.3 | 67 – 69% | Poor |
| D | 1.0 | 63 – 66% | Below Standard |
| D- | 0.7 | 60 – 62% | Marginal Pass |
| F | 0.0 | 0 – 59% | Failing |
How to Use the USA GPA Calculator
Start by selecting your calculation mode. College students should use the Standard GPA (4.0) tab, which calculates your GPA using the traditional American letter grade system. High school students taking AP, IB, or Honors courses should switch to the Weighted GPA (5.0) tab to get credit for advanced coursework. Enter each course with its name, credit hours, and letter grade. Your GPA updates instantly in the Quick Stats bar as you fill in each field. Results update automatically, so there is no need to click a calculate button.
How the US GPA System Works
The American GPA system assigns numerical grade points to letter grades and weights them by credit hours. The formula is consistent across most US colleges and universities:
• English 201 (3 credits): A (4.0) = 12.0 quality points
• Chemistry 121 (4 credits): B+ (3.3) = 13.2 quality points
• History 102 (3 credits): A- (3.7) = 11.1 quality points
• Statistics 200 (3 credits): B (3.0) = 9.0 quality points
• Psychology 101 (3 credits): A (4.0) = 12.0 quality points
Total Quality Points = 57.3 | Total Credits = 16
GPA = 57.3 / 16 = 3.58
David’s GPA is 3.58, which falls in the A- range and qualifies for the Dean’s List at most schools.
This means David’s overall performance is the weighted average of his grades, with courses carrying more credit hours having proportionally more influence on his GPA. Use our cumulative GPA calculator to combine multiple semesters, or the semester GPA calculator for single-semester analysis.
Weighted vs Unweighted GPA in American Schools
The distinction between weighted and unweighted GPA is one of the most confusing aspects of the American education system, particularly for high school students applying to college. An unweighted GPA uses the standard 4.0 scale regardless of course difficulty. Every class, whether it is a regular English course or AP Calculus, is graded on the same 4.0 maximum.
A weighted GPA recognizes course rigor by adding extra grade points for advanced courses. The most common weighted scale goes up to 5.0. On this scale, an A in a regular course earns 4.0, an A in an Honors course earns 4.5, and an A in an AP or IB course earns 5.0. This rewards students who challenge themselves with harder coursework.
How Colleges Evaluate Weighted GPA
Most selective colleges recalculate every applicant’s GPA on their own internal scale. This means your school’s specific weighted GPA number matters less than the rigor of your course selection. Admissions officers want to see that you took the most challenging courses available to you. A 3.8 unweighted GPA with 8 AP courses is typically viewed more favorably than a 4.2 weighted GPA with no advanced classes.
The University of California system, for example, caps weighted GPA at 4.4 and only counts AP, IB, and UC-approved Honors courses taken in sophomore and junior year, with a maximum of 8 semesters receiving the extra point. Use our high school GPA calculator for school-specific calculations or the college GPA calculator for post-secondary analysis.
Tips to Improve Your US GPA
- Prioritize high-credit courses. Earning an A in a 4-credit course boosts your GPA more than an A in a 1-credit course. Focus your study effort accordingly.
- Use Pass/Fail strategically. If your school allows it, take electives outside your comfort zone as Pass/Fail so a lower grade does not drag down your GPA.
- Plan ahead with projections. Use the raise GPA calculator to set target grades for upcoming semesters and the what grade do I need calculator to determine minimum scores.
- Consider retaking courses. Many schools allow grade replacement, where the new grade replaces the old one in GPA calculation. Check your institution’s retake policy.
Common GPA Mistakes American Students Make
- Confusing semester and cumulative GPA. Your semester GPA covers only the current term. Your cumulative GPA includes all semesters. A single strong semester helps less when you have many prior credits.
- Not accounting for credit hour weight. A C in a 4-credit course hurts more than a C in a 1-credit course. Always consider credit hours when planning your course load.
- Ignoring withdrawal deadlines. A W (withdrawal) does not affect GPA, but a WF (withdrawal failing) counts as an F at many schools. Know your school’s deadlines.
- Assuming all schools use the same scale. Some use A+ = 4.33, others cap at 4.0. Some schools do not use plus/minus modifiers at all. Always check your specific institution’s policy.