Enter every graded attempt
Application-service GPAs often differ from campus GPAs because repeated, forgiven, or transferred coursework may still matter during verification.
Estimate your law school application GPA with the LSAC conversion scale, where A+ can count as 4.33.
LSAC counts every undergraduate course attempt that can be converted to its scale. Your institution's forgiveness or repeat policy may not match the LSAC GPA.
The LSAC GPA is the GPA law schools receive through the Credential Assembly Service. It can differ from the GPA printed on your transcript because LSAC standardizes grades across undergraduate institutions.
The most visible difference is the A+ rule. On the LSAC conversion table, an A+ can receive 4.33 quality points, while many colleges cap A+ at 4.0 or do not award A+ at all. Repeated courses also matter because LSAC includes every convertible undergraduate attempt rather than simply accepting your school's repeat-forgiveness policy.
Use this calculator as a planning estimate. Enter each undergraduate course, the transcript grade, and attempted credits. If your transcript has unusual marks, non-graded credit, withdrawals, or international coursework, compare your entries with LSAC's official transcript summarization rules.
LSAC GPA = total LSAC quality points / total attempted graded creditsOfficial reference: application-service GPA guidance.
Application-service GPAs often differ from campus GPAs because repeated, forgiven, or transferred coursework may still matter during verification.
For health-profession services, the subject category can change the science GPA even when the overall GPA stays the same.
Use this page for planning and spotting problems early. The official GPA is the verified value produced by the application service.
| Transcript grade | Numeric value |
|---|---|
| A+ | 4.33 |
| A | 4.00 |
| A- | 3.67 |
| B+ | 3.33 |
| B | 3.00 |
| B- | 2.67 |
| C+ | 2.33 |
| C | 2.00 |
| C- | 1.67 |
| D+ | 1.33 |
| D | 1.00 |
| D- | 0.67 |
| F/WF | 0.00 |
LSAC recalculates undergraduate grades with its own conversion rules. Your school may exclude an old attempt, cap A+ at 4.0, or display a different institutional GPA. LSAC standardization is designed for law school comparison.
Yes, when an A+ appears as a convertible grade, LSAC's scale can assign 4.33 quality points. That is why some applicants see a CAS GPA above 4.0.
Generally, every undergraduate attempt that can be converted is part of the calculation. Do not enter only the newer grade if your transcript shows both attempts.
No. It is an estimator based on published conversion rules. The official value is the one LSAC calculates after receiving and processing your transcripts.