Your Grade Point Average (GPA) is one of the most important numbers in your academic career. It affects university admissions, scholarships, job applications, and graduate school entries. Understanding exactly how it's calculated puts you in control.
GPA converts your percentage or letter grades to a numerical scale, most commonly the 4.0 scale used by universities worldwide.
Each course contributes based on its credit hours and your grade
| Percentage | Letter Grade | GPA Points | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 90โ100% | A+ | 4.0 | Excellent |
| 80โ89% | A | 3.5โ4.0 | Very Good |
| 70โ79% | B+/B | 3.0โ3.5 | Good |
| 60โ69% | C+/C | 2.0โ3.0 | Average |
| 50โ59% | D | 1.0โ2.0 | Below Average |
| Below 50% | F | 0.0 | Fail |
For entry-level roles, yes โ many employers use GPA as a screening filter, typically requiring 3.0 or above. After 2-3 years of work experience, GPA matters much less than your track record.
A 3.0 GPA (B average) is considered the minimum for most graduate school applications and many competitive employers. It's respectable but not outstanding.