How GPA is calculated
Your GPA (Grade Point Average) is a credit-weighted average: each course's grade points are multiplied by its credit hours, summed, then divided by total credits. In formula form: GPA = ฮฃ(grade points ร credits) รท ฮฃ(credits). A 3-credit A (4.0) lifts your GPA more than a 1-credit A โ that's the weighting at work.
Semester vs cumulative GPA
Your semester GPA covers only this term. Your cumulative GPA (CGPA) averages everything you've completed. Enter your current GPA and completed credits above, and this calculator blends them with this semester to show your new cumulative โ the number on your transcript.
Common GPA milestones
- 3.7+ โ typically summa/magna cum laude territory and Dean's List
- 3.5+ โ competitive for graduate school and scholarships
- 3.0+ โ the bar many employers and programs screen at
- 2.0 โ usually the minimum to stay in good academic standing
Do pass/fail courses count?
Usually not in the GPA โ they earn credits without grade points. Leave them out of the calculator (or check your school's policy).
What if I retake a course?
Policies differ: some schools replace the old grade, others average both attempts. The calculator reflects whichever grades your transcript counts.
Can I raise a low GPA quickly?
The more credits you've completed, the more slowly the cumulative moves โ that's why the target feature shows what average you'd need. Early semesters are the cheapest time to bank high grades.