Snow College GPA Calculator

Estimate your Snow College GPA using Snow College's letter-grade point values.

Your Snow College courses

Your Snow College GPA

Total Credits: 0Grade: Percentage:

Fill at least one grade and credit value to see your GPA.

How the Snow College GPA Calculator Works

This calculator uses Snow College's letter-grade point values. GPA is credit-weighted: each course grade becomes a grade point, that point value is multiplied by credits, then all quality points are divided by total GPA credits.

GPA = total quality points / total GPA credits

For example, A in a 3-credit course contributes 4.00 x 3 = 12.00 quality points. The result above updates instantly as you enter more courses.

Snow College publishes letter grades with point values, including plus/minus grades such as C+ = 2.3 and D+ = 1.3. Source: Snow College Academic Catalog - Records.

Snow College Grading Scale

GradeGrade points
A4.0
A-3.70
B+3.30
B3.0
B-2.70
C+2.30
C2.0
C-1.70
D+1.30
D1.0
D-0.70
F0.0

Maximum grade-point value on this page: 4.0.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Snow College calculate GPA?

Snow College GPA is calculated with a credit-weighted formula. Each grade is converted to grade points, multiplied by the course credits, then divided by total GPA credits. This page uses the grade-point values shown in the scale table above.

Is this Snow College GPA calculator official?

No. It is a planning calculator based on published grading information. Use it for quick estimates and what-if planning, but rely on the official student portal or transcript for the GPA that counts.

Which grades should I enter?

Enter only courses that carry GPA grade points. Leave out audit, pass/no-credit, transfer, incomplete, and withdrawal marks unless your school's policy says they count in GPA.

Can I use this for semester and overall GPA?

Yes. Enter one semester to estimate a term GPA, or enter all GPA-bearing courses to estimate your overall GPA. If you already know past semester GPAs, the overall college GPA calculator may be faster.

Why might the result differ from my transcript?

Differences usually come from rounding, repeated-course rules, excluded transfer courses, grade replacement, or school-specific academic policies. Treat this result as a close estimate.

Where did the grading scale come from?

The page links to the school-published or official grading source used for the calculator. Catalogs can change, so verify edge cases with the registrar or current catalog.