GPA Calculator – Canadian 4.0 Scale
Enter your courses and grades. Your GPA updates instantly.
How This GPA Calculator Works
This calculator uses the standard weighted GPA formula used by most Canadian universities on the 4.0 scale. You enter each course, pick your letter grade, and add the credit hours. The calculator converts your letter grade to a grade point value, multiplies it by the credit hours to get quality points, then divides the total quality points by total credit hours.
GPA = Total Quality Points / Total Credit Hours
Where Quality Points = Grade Point Value x Credit Hours for each course
So if you got a B+ (3.3) in a 3-credit course, that course contributes 9.9 quality points. Add that across all your courses, divide by total credits, and you get your GPA.
Canadian Grade to GPA Conversion Scale
This is the standard conversion table this calculator uses. It follows the most common scale used across Canadian universities including University of Toronto, McGill, UBC, and the University of Alberta.
| Letter Grade | Percentage Range | Grade Points (4.0) | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 90 – 100% | 4.0 | Exceptional |
| A | 85 – 89% | 4.0 | Excellent |
| A- | 80 – 84% | 3.7 | Very Good |
| B+ | 77 – 79% | 3.3 | Good |
| B | 73 – 76% | 3.0 | Satisfactory |
| B- | 70 – 72% | 2.7 | Adequate |
| C+ | 67 – 69% | 2.3 | Marginal |
| C | 63 – 66% | 2.0 | Marginal |
| C- | 60 – 62% | 1.7 | Below Average |
| D+ | 57 – 59% | 1.3 | Poor |
| D | 53 – 56% | 1.0 | Poor |
| D- | 50 – 52% | 0.7 | Barely Passing |
| F | 0 – 49% | 0.0 | Failing |
Quick Reference: Sample GPA Calculations
Here are some worked examples so you can sanity-check your results.
| Course | Grade | Credits | Quality Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| MATH 101 | A (4.0) | 3 | 12.0 |
| ENG 102 | B+ (3.3) | 3 | 9.9 |
| CHEM 103 | B (3.0) | 4 | 12.0 |
| HIST 104 | A- (3.7) | 3 | 11.1 |
| Total | 13 | 45.0 |
GPA = 45.0 / 13 = 3.46 (a solid B+ average)
What Is a Good GPA in Canada?
For staying enrolled
Most Canadian universities require a minimum GPA of 2.0 to remain in good academic standing. Falling below this usually results in academic probation, and staying below it can mean suspension from your program.
For graduate school
If you are planning to apply to a Master’s or PhD program in Canada, most programs have a minimum of 3.0. Competitive programs at schools like University of Toronto or UBC commonly admit students with 3.5 and above. Strong research experience can sometimes offset a GPA that is slightly below the cutoff.
For scholarships
The NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Award and most provincial scholarships require at least a 3.5 GPA. The Queen Elizabeth II scholarships and similar merit-based awards typically look for 3.7 and above. If your GPA is between 3.0 and 3.4, focus on extracurriculars and research experience to strengthen your application.
Common Mistakes Students Make
Forgetting to weight by credits
A 5-credit chemistry course counts more than a 1-credit elective. A lot of students make the mistake of just averaging their letter grades without weighting by credit hours. That always gives the wrong answer.
Confusing semester GPA with cumulative GPA
Your semester GPA covers only the courses you took that term. Your cumulative GPA covers everything from all terms. Graduate schools and scholarship committees almost always look at your cumulative GPA. This calculator handles both: just enter all your courses for cumulative, or only this semester’s courses for a semester-only result.
Using the wrong scale
Some schools use a 4.3 scale (where A+ = 4.3) and others use 4.0 (where A+ = 4.0). Most external applications (graduate school, jobs, scholarship apps) will ask you to report on a 4.0 scale. When converting, divide your GPA by the maximum value your school uses and multiply by 4.0.
Including non-credit courses
Audited courses and pass/fail courses typically do not count toward your GPA. If you pass a course without a letter grade, leave it out of this calculator or it will skew your result.
Frequently Asked Questions
What GPA do I need to get into a Canadian university?
For undergraduate admission, most Canadian universities require a high school average of around 70-85% depending on the program. For competitive programs like engineering, medicine, or computer science at top schools, you typically need 85% and above. GPA as a 4.0 figure matters more once you are already in university.
Is a 3.0 GPA good in Canada?
A 3.0 GPA is a B average. It keeps you in good standing at most Canadian universities and qualifies you for many graduate programs. For highly competitive programs or scholarships, you will want to aim for 3.5 or higher. A 3.0 is respectable; it is just not going to open every door.
How do I convert my percentage grade to GPA?
Use the table above to find your letter grade first, then match it to its GPA value. For example, 78% falls in the B+ range, which is 3.3 on the 4.0 scale. This calculator does that conversion automatically when you select a letter grade from the dropdown.
Do all Canadian universities use the same GPA scale?
Not exactly. Most use a 4.0 scale with similar grade point values, but there are small differences in where they set the percentage boundaries. University of Toronto, McGill, UBC, and the University of Alberta all have slightly different percentage-to-letter-grade mappings. Always double-check your specific institution’s official grading policy.
Can I raise my GPA before graduation?
Yes, especially if you still have several semesters left. The earlier you are in your program, the more impact each new term has on your cumulative GPA. If you are in your final year with a 2.5 GPA, getting straight As will raise you, but not dramatically. Use this calculator to simulate realistic scenarios.