Percentage to GPA Converter
Enter any percentage score (0–100%) and instantly see the equivalent GPA points and letter grade on the standard 4.0 scale.
Percentage to GPA Conversion Table
| Percentage | Letter Grade | GPA Points | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| 97–100% | A+/A | 4.0 | Excellent |
| 93–96% | A | 4.0 | Excellent |
| 90–92% | A- | 3.7 | Excellent |
| 87–89% | B+ | 3.3 | Good |
| 83–86% | B | 3.0 | Good |
| 80–82% | B- | 2.7 | Good |
| 77–79% | C+ | 2.3 | Satisfactory |
| 73–76% | C | 2.0 | Satisfactory |
| 70–72% | C- | 1.7 | Satisfactory |
| 67–69% | D+ | 1.3 | Passing |
| 60–66% | D | 1.0 | Passing |
| 0–59% | F | 0.0 | Failing |
How to Convert Percentage to GPA
Converting a percentage to a GPA involves two steps: finding the letter grade that corresponds to your percentage, then looking up the GPA points for that letter grade.
Example: 5 Class Percentages
Math: 91% → A- → 3.7
English: 85% → B → 3.0
Science: 78% → C+ → 2.3
History: 94% → A → 4.0
PE: 88% → B+ → 3.3
GPA = (3.7 + 3.0 + 2.3 + 4.0 + 3.3) ÷ 5 = 16.3 ÷ 5 = 3.26
Why Your School May Use Different Cutoffs
The percentage cutoffs for letter grades are not standardized nationally. Each state, district, or school can set its own. The most common variations you'll encounter in U.S. middle schools:
If you're not sure which scale your school uses, check your student handbook, ask your teacher, or look at your online grade portal — most platforms display the grading scale used for each class.
Percentage to GPA Conversion Table
This table shows the standard conversion from percentage score to letter grade to GPA points, using the most common U.S. middle school grading scale. Note that some schools use slightly different cutoffs — always check your school's specific grading policy for exact values.
| Percentage Range | Letter Grade | GPA Points | Classification |
|---|---|---|---|
| 97–100% | A+ | 4.0 | Exceptional |
| 93–96% | A | 4.0 | Excellent |
| 90–92% | A- | 3.7 | Excellent |
| 87–89% | B+ | 3.3 | Good |
| 83–86% | B | 3.0 | Good |
| 80–82% | B- | 2.7 | Good |
| 77–79% | C+ | 2.3 | Satisfactory |
| 73–76% | C | 2.0 | Satisfactory |
| 70–72% | C- | 1.7 | Satisfactory |
| 67–69% | D+ | 1.3 | Passing |
| 63–66% | D | 1.0 | Passing |
| 60–62% | D- | 0.7 | Barely Passing |
| 0–59% | F | 0.0 | Failing |
Note: A+ and A are both worth 4.0 GPA points at most middle schools. Some schools don't distinguish between them at all, reporting only "A" for anything 90% and above (or 93% and above, depending on the school).
Why Do Schools Use GPA Instead of Percentages?
You might wonder why schools convert your percentage grade into a letter, and then into a GPA point value, when they could just track percentages directly. There are several practical reasons for this conversion:
Standardization across subjects
An 88% in math and an 88% in art are technically the same number, but they represent very different things — the difficulty of the subject, the grading style of the teacher, and the type of assessments used all vary. The letter grade system and 4.0 scale create a standardized unit for comparison.
Resistance to small percentage differences
The difference between an 89% and a 90% might be a single question on one test. By grouping percentages into letter grades (B+ vs. A-), the system creates meaningful distinctions without over-interpreting tiny differences in raw percentage scores.
Simple averaging across classes
When you have 6 classes with different percentage averages, calculating a single overall GPA as a percentage is complex (you'd need to weight by number of possible points in each class). GPA on the 4.0 scale makes averaging across classes clean and consistent.
Historical convention
The GPA system has been standard in American education for over a century. Colleges, employers, and scholarship committees all understand what a 3.5 GPA means. Switching to percentages would require everyone to recalibrate their expectations.
My School Uses Different Cutoffs — What Should I Do?
Not every school uses 93% as the cutoff for an A or 90% for an A-. Some common alternate cutoffs:
- 90% = A (10-point scale): Many schools use a simple 10-point range per letter: 90–100 = A, 80–89 = B, 70–79 = C, 60–69 = D. On this scale, a 90% is an A (4.0), not an A- (3.7).
- Stricter scale: Some schools require a 95% for an A. On that scale, an 93% would be an A- (3.7), not an A (4.0).
- No plus/minus: Some schools give only A, B, C, D, or F — no A- or B+ distinctions. On this scale, an 88% and a 94% are both just "A = 4.0."
Our calculator supports multiple grading scales — use the Grade Scale selector to switch to the 10-point scale, the simple (no plus/minus) scale, or enter your school's exact percentage cutoffs in the custom scale option. When in doubt, your school's student handbook or guidance counselor can confirm your school's official grading scale.
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