Course credits
Credits are the multiplier. A small grade change in a high-credit course can move GPA more than a big change in a low-credit course.
Estimate your UofT GPA using University of Toronto's refined 4.0 scale.
Your UofT GPA
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Fill at least one grade and credit value to see your GPA.
UofT's refined scale treats A+ and A as 4.0, then steps down through A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, and F.
GPA = total grade points earned / total GPA creditsExample: an A- in a half-credit course contributes 3.70 x 0.5 = 1.85 quality points. A B+ in a full-credit course contributes 3.30 x 1.0 = 3.30 quality points.
The useful part for UofT students is separating GPA-bearing graded courses from CR/NCR, late withdrawal, transfer work, or repeated-course situations. Put only the courses that should count toward the GPA you are estimating.
Source checked for this scale: University of Toronto transcript grading scales.
Credits are the multiplier. A small grade change in a high-credit course can move GPA more than a big change in a low-credit course.
Do not enter pass/fail, withdrawal, audit, or incomplete records unless your official policy says they count in GPA.
If a repeated course replaces or averages a previous attempt, your transcript can differ from a simple course-by-course estimate.
| Grade | Grade points |
|---|---|
| A+ | 4.0 |
| A | 4.0 |
| A- | 3.70 |
| B+ | 3.30 |
| B | 3.0 |
| B- | 2.70 |
| C+ | 2.30 |
| C | 2.0 |
| C- | 1.70 |
| D+ | 1.30 |
| D | 1.0 |
| D- | 0.70 |
| F | 0.0 |
Use only GPA-bearing grades for the GPA you are estimating.
UofT GPA is calculated with a credit-weighted formula: grade points multiplied by course credits, divided by total GPA credits. This page uses the grade-point values shown in the scale table above.
No. It is an independent planning calculator built from published grading information. Use it to estimate and plan, but rely on your official transcript, registrar, or student portal for the GPA that counts.
Leave out courses that do not carry GPA points for the GPA you are estimating, such as audit, pass/fail, transfer-only, withdrawal, or incomplete records unless your school explicitly includes them.
Transcript GPAs can differ because of repeated-course rules, rounding, course exclusions, academic standing policies, transfer treatment, or faculty-specific rules. The calculator shows the clean credit-weighted math so you can spot the likely reason.
Yes. Enter one semester for a term GPA, or enter all GPA-bearing courses for an overall estimate. If you already know past semester GPAs, the cumulative or overall GPA calculator may be faster.
The grade dropdown uses the specific scale for University of Toronto, the explanation calls out common transcript traps, and the result includes a smart-move hint showing which entered course would move your GPA fastest.