Every calculator
you actually need
GPA, grades, attendance, study planning — straight answers with no fluff. No account. No paywall.
The students who get blindsided at the end of a semester aren't the ones who studied too little. They're often the ones who simply never checked the math. A B on homework worth 5% feels fine until you realize you needed that buffer going into a midterm worth 35%.
Academic performance isn't just about how hard you work — it's also about how deliberately you allocate that effort. Knowing your grade breakdown, GPA trajectory, and attendance standing converts vague anxiety into a concrete plan.
GPA isn't a simple average. Each letter grade carries a point value, multiplied by course credit hours.
÷ Total Credits
e.g. B+(3.3×4) + A(4.0×3) + A-(3.7×2)
= 32.6 ÷ 9 = 3.62
An A in a 1-credit PE class contributes far less than an A in 4-credit Calculus. That's why manual averages mislead.
| Letter Grade | 4.0 Scale | Typical % Range | Quality Points (3-credit course) |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 4.0 | 93–100% | 12.0 pts |
| A− | 3.7 | 90–92% | 11.1 pts |
| B+ | 3.3 | 87–89% | 9.9 pts |
| B | 3.0 | 83–86% | 9.0 pts |
| B− | 2.7 | 80–82% | 8.1 pts |
| C+ | 2.3 | 77–79% | 6.9 pts |
| C | 2.0 | 73–76% | 6.0 pts |
| D | 1.0 | 60–69% | 3.0 pts |
| F | 0.0 | Below 60% | 0.0 pts |
Every calculator on this page is built on established academic formulas and designed to give you an honest, accurate read of your situation. GPA scales, grading weights, attendance policies, and credit rules vary between institutions — sometimes significantly. The numbers here are reliable starting points, but your registrar's office, academic advisor, or professor is the authoritative source for anything with real consequences attached. Use these tools to inform your decisions; verify the critical ones with the people who officially hold your records.
