Check the transcript scale
Convert from the scale printed on your transcript, not from an informal classroom percentage if your transcript reports GPA.
Convert a GPA from 4.0, 10.0, 20.0, or percentage format to a 5.0-scale estimate.
Estimated converted GPA
Relative standing: —
Do not use this to invent an official board GPA. Systems such as Bangladesh SSC/HSC use grade-point rules that may not match a simple proportional conversion.
Use this converter for exam-board and school systems that talk about a 5.0 maximum. The tool keeps the same relative position on the scale, so a 3.20 on 4.0 becomes about 4.00 on 5.0.
5.0 estimate = (your GPA / current scale maximum) x 5.0Do not use this to invent an official board GPA. Systems such as Bangladesh SSC/HSC use grade-point rules that may not match a simple proportional conversion.
Convert from the scale printed on your transcript, not from an informal classroom percentage if your transcript reports GPA.
Some schools convert by letter bands rather than direct proportion, so a cutoff-based table can differ from this estimate.
If a form asks for unconverted GPA, enter the original value and scale. Use this result only where a converted estimate is requested.
No. It is a planning estimate. Official evaluations may use course-by-course conversion, minimum grade rules, repeated-course handling, or country-specific tables.
Proportional conversion is the cleanest general method when the source and target schools do not publish a specific conversion table. It preserves your relative position on the source scale.
Use it for context only. On applications, report the GPA exactly as your transcript shows it unless the school asks you to convert it.
Use the maximum of the scale that appears on your transcript. If the official transcript reports percentages, choose 100 as the source scale. If it reports GPA out of 10, choose 10.
Some institutions map specific percentage bands to letters first, then letters to GPA. That can produce a different result from a proportional conversion, especially near grade cutoffs.
Use the weighted GPA converter and enter the maximum weighted scale your school uses. Treat the output as a rough normalization, not a promise that another school will recalculate the same way.