Grade Point Calculator
Track total grade points, weighted credits, and GPA in a cleaner planner-style interface that feels closer to a student dashboard than an old-school GPA form.
Build your term plan
Edit courses, credits, and grades with weighted or unweighted mode.
The weighted average after grade points are divided by total credits.
Switch this to match your school policy before trusting the result.
The GPA looks simple, but the leverage usually sits inside the grade-point total. Higher-credit classes move the outcome more, which is why this page shows both numbers side by side instead of hiding grade points behind a single average.
What Is a Grade Point Calculator?
A grade point calculator helps students translate classes, credits, and letter grades into two numbers that actually matter: total grade points and GPA. The reason both numbers matter is that GPA alone hides the structure underneath. A three-credit course and a four-credit course do not carry the same weight, and a stronger planner should make that obvious instead of burying it.
This is why the page is built more like a term dashboard than a generic form. The user can add or remove classes, switch between standard and weighted scales, and immediately see how one class affects the whole semester. That is much closer to the real planning job a student is trying to do than simply typing grades into a static GPA box.
How to Calculate Grade Points
Every letter grade maps to a point value. In a standard 4.0 system, an A is usually 4.0, a B is 3.0, and so on. Grade points come from multiplying that point value by the course credits. If a class is worth four credits and earns a 3.3 point value, the result is 13.2 grade points for that single class.
After calculating each row, total grade points are added together. Then GPA is calculated by dividing total grade points by total credits. That means the formula is GPA = total grade points / total credits. The weighted-vs-unweighted difference simply changes the point value assigned to each grade, which can make a meaningful difference in schools that give extra weight to advanced classes.
This planner view helps because it shows where the score actually moves. A higher-credit class can swing the average more than a lower-credit one, so a student deciding where to focus their effort can get a clearer answer than they would from a plain GPA-only output.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Four classes worth 3, 4, 3, and 4 credits with grades A, B+, A-, and B produce grade-point totals that sum to 48.3. Dividing by 14 total credits produces a GPA of 3.45.
Example 2: If one honors course uses a weighted scale, the same letter grade may contribute more grade points than in the standard 4.0 system. That is why the scale toggle should always match the real institution rule.