Skip to content

Calculateur de GPA

Calculateur de GPA gratuit - calculez et comparez les options instantanement. Aucune inscription requise.

Chargement de la calculatrice

Préparation de Calculateur de GPA...

Révision et méthodologie

Chaque calculatrice utilise des formules standard de l'industrie, validées par des sources officielles et révisées par un professionnel financier certifié. Tous les calculs s'exécutent en privé dans votre navigateur.

Dernière révision:

Révisé par:

Rédigé par:

Comment utiliser le calculateur de GPA

  1. 1. Entrez vos valeurs - remplissez les champs de saisie avec vos chiffres.
  2. 2. Ajustez les parametres - utilisez les curseurs et selecteurs pour personnaliser votre calcul.
  3. 3. Consultez les resultats instantanement - les calculs se mettent a jour en temps reel lorsque vous modifiez les donnees.
  4. 4. Comparez les scenarios - ajustez les valeurs pour voir comment les changements affectent vos resultats.
  5. 5. Partagez ou imprimez - copiez le lien, partagez les resultats ou imprimez pour vos dossiers.

GPA Calculator

Calculate your grade point average by entering your courses, letter grades, and credit hours. This calculator uses the standard 4.0 scale and weights each grade by the number of credits the course carries — because a 3-credit course counts for less than a 4-credit course, even if the grade is the same. Students use it to track semester performance, project their cumulative GPA before finals, and check whether they meet a scholarship threshold or graduate school minimum.

How GPA Is Calculated

GPA is a weighted average where each grade is multiplied by the credit hours of its course to produce “quality points,” and those quality points are summed and divided by total credit hours:

GPA = Sum of (Grade Points x Credit Hours) / Total Credit Hours

Standard grade point values: A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, B- = 2.7, C+ = 2.3, C = 2.0, C- = 1.7, D+ = 1.3, D = 1.0, F = 0.0. A 3-credit A earns 12 quality points. A 4-credit B also earns 12 quality points. These courses contribute equally to GPA despite the different letter grades — which is why credit hours matter so much.

Worked Examples

A student takes four courses in a semester: Calculus I (A, 4 credits), English Composition (B+, 3 credits), Chemistry (B, 4 credits), and History (A-, 3 credits). Quality points are 16 + 9.9 + 12 + 11.1 = 49.0. Total credits = 14. GPA = 49.0 / 14 = 3.50 — solidly on the Dean’s List at most schools.

A pre-med student is worried about a C+ in Organic Chemistry (4 credits). Their other courses that semester: Biochemistry (A, 3 credits), Statistics (A-, 3 credits), and Literature (A, 3 credits). Quality points: 9.2 + 12 + 11.1 + 12 = 44.3. Total credits = 13. GPA = 44.3 / 13 = 3.41. The C+ in the high-credit course pulled the semester GPA down from what would have been a 3.83 without it — a clear illustration of how credit-hour weighting works.

A graduate student needs to maintain a 3.0 cumulative GPA to stay in their program. After two semesters totaling 24 credits, their cumulative GPA is 2.95. They’re taking 12 credits this semester and want to know what GPA they need to bring the cumulative above 3.0. Current quality points = 2.95 x 24 = 70.8. To reach 3.0 across 36 total credits, they need 36 x 3.0 = 108 total quality points, meaning they need 108 - 70.8 = 37.2 quality points from 12 credits — a 3.1 semester GPA. Achievable, but tight.

GPA Reference Table

Letter GradeGrade Points3-Credit Quality Points4-Credit Quality Points
A4.012.016.0
A-3.711.114.8
B+3.39.913.2
B3.09.012.0
B-2.78.110.8
C+2.36.99.2
C2.06.08.0
C-1.75.16.8
D1.03.04.0
F0.00.00.0

When to Use This Calculator

  • End-of-semester review — confirm your semester GPA matches what your school will post, and spot any grading errors before they’re finalized
  • Scholarship eligibility — most merit scholarships require a 3.0, 3.2, or 3.5 minimum; calculate whether you’re on track before the deadline
  • Graduate school planning — law schools, medical schools, and graduate programs typically want a 3.0-3.7+ depending on the program; use this to project where you’ll land
  • Course load planning — enter planned courses and target grades to see what GPA is achievable with a given schedule
  • Academic probation recovery — if you’re below the minimum, use the what-if mode to figure out exactly what grades you need to get back above the threshold

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Ignoring credit hours. Many students assume GPA is a simple average of letter grades. It’s not. A 4-credit F is four times as damaging as a 1-credit F. Always enter accurate credit hours — guessing them leads to a GPA estimate that can be off by 0.2 points or more.
  2. Confusing semester GPA with cumulative GPA. One good semester won’t fix a bad cumulative if you’ve built up many credits. A 4.0 semester when you already have 60 credits at a 2.8 only brings the cumulative to about 2.87 — movement is slow the further into a degree you get.
  3. Not accounting for grade replacement policies. Some schools replace the old grade entirely; others average both attempts. These produce very different cumulative GPAs. Check your institution’s academic handbook before assuming retaking a course will fix your GPA.
  4. Counting pass/fail courses. Most schools exclude P/F courses from GPA calculations. Including them in the calculator will inflate or deflate your GPA estimate. Enter only letter-graded courses.

Real-World Applications

Graduate admissions committees use cumulative GPA as one of the first filters — medical school applicants with below 3.2 face steep odds at most programs regardless of MCAT scores. Employers in competitive fields like finance, consulting, and engineering often set 3.0 or 3.5 GPA minimums for entry-level applications. Academic scholarships and honors programs require maintaining specific GPAs each semester or annually. Federal financial aid (FAFSA) requires students to maintain satisfactory academic progress, which includes a minimum GPA, usually 2.0. Athletic eligibility under NCAA rules requires at least a 2.0 GPA to compete.

Tips

  1. Calculate your GPA after midterms using projected final grades — you’ll have enough lead time to change course if a class is trending badly
  2. Use the what-if approach before finals: enter your current grades in all courses and change one to see how much a single grade shift moves the needle
  3. Prioritize your highest-credit courses — a grade jump from B to A in a 4-credit course adds 4 quality points, while the same jump in a 1-credit course adds only 1
  4. Dean’s list at most schools requires a 3.5+ semester GPA; Latin honors (cum laude) typically starts at 3.5 cumulative, magna cum laude at 3.7, and summa cum laude at 3.9
  5. If your school offers grade replacement, retake the highest-credit failed or low-grade course first for maximum GPA impact
  6. Track both semester and cumulative GPA over time — a downward trend across semesters is easier to reverse early than after four or five semesters of damage

Questions fréquentes

Comment le GPA est-il calcule sur une echelle de 4.0 ?
Le GPA est calcule en attribuant a chaque note une valeur numerique (A = 4,0, B = 3,0, C = 2,0, D = 1,0, F = 0,0), en multipliant chaque valeur par le nombre de credits du cours pour obtenir des points de qualite, en additionnant tous les points de qualite, puis en divisant par le total des credits. Par exemple, un A (4,0) dans un cours de 3 credits et un B (3,0) dans un cours de 4 credits donnent (12 + 12) / 7 = 3,43 de GPA.
Quelle est la difference entre GPA pondere et non pondere ?
Un GPA non pondere traite tous les cours de maniere egale sur une echelle de 4,0, quelle que soit la difficulte. Un GPA pondere accorde des points supplementaires pour les cours honors, AP ou IB : generalement 0,5 point de plus pour les cours honors et 1,0 point de plus pour les cours AP/IB, rendant possible une echelle de 5,0. Par exemple, un A dans un cours AP peut compter comme 5,0 au lieu de 4,0. Les universites recalculent souvent le GPA selon leur propre systeme de ponderation lors de l'examen des candidatures.
A quelles valeurs de GPA correspondent les differentes notes ?
La conversion standard est : A = 4,0, A- = 3,7, B+ = 3,3, B = 3,0, B- = 2,7, C+ = 2,3, C = 2,0, C- = 1,7, D+ = 1,3, D = 1,0, D- = 0,7 et F = 0,0. Certains etablissements n'utilisent pas la notation plus/moins et n'attribuent que des valeurs entieres. Les heures de credit servent de poids, donc un cours de 4 credits affecte votre GPA deux fois plus qu'un cours de 2 credits.
Quel GPA les universites exigent-elles generalement pour l'admission ?
Les exigences varient considerablement : les colleges communautaires ont souvent une admission ouverte, les universites d'Etat attendent generalement un GPA de 2,5 a 3,0, les universites d'Etat competitives recherchent 3,0 a 3,5, et les universites tres selectives (Ivy League, Stanford, MIT) attendent generalement 3,7 ou plus. Les programmes de master exigent souvent un minimum de 3,0 pour l'admission. Gardez a l'esprit que le GPA n'est qu'un facteur parmi d'autres : les scores aux tests standardises, les activites parascolaires et les essais jouent egalement un role significatif.
Comment ameliorer efficacement mon GPA ?
Concentrez-vous sur les cours avec le plus grand nombre de credits car ils ont le plus grand impact sur votre GPA. Reprendre un cours echoue ou avec une note basse (si votre etablissement permet le remplacement de note) peut ameliorer significativement votre GPA. Prendre des charges de cours plus legeres pour obtenir de meilleures notes, chercher un tuteur tot dans les cours difficiles et assister regulierement aux heures de permanence des professeurs sont autant de strategies utiles. Mathematiquement, remonter un GPA bas devient de plus en plus difficile avec le temps car chaque nouveau cours est moyenne avec un nombre croissant de credits totaux.

Decouvrez plus d'outils mathematiques et scientifiques

Calculatrices