GPA Impact Calculator – Canada
Will this course pull your GPA up, push it down, or leave it the same? Find out now.
How This Calculator Works
The question is: will this course pull your GPA up or down? The answer depends on one simple comparison. If your course grade point value is higher than your current GPA, your GPA goes up. If it is lower, your GPA goes down. If it equals your current GPA, it stays exactly the same.
The math behind it:
New GPA = (Current GPA x Completed Credits + Course GP x Course Credits) / (Completed Credits + Course Credits)
GPA Change = New GPA – Current GPA
So if your current GPA is 3.0 over 45 credits and you get a B+ (3.3) in a 3-credit course, your new GPA is (3.0 x 45 + 3.3 x 3) / 48 = (135 + 9.9) / 48 = 144.9 / 48 = 3.019. It goes up by 0.019. Small, but it goes up.
Table of Truth: Sample Scenarios
| Current GPA | Credits Done | Course Credits | Grade Received | New GPA | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.00 | 45 | 3 | A (4.0) | 3.02 | +0.02 ▲ |
| 3.00 | 45 | 3 | B+ (3.3) | 3.02 | +0.02 ▲ |
| 3.00 | 45 | 3 | B (3.0) | 3.00 | 0.00 → |
| 3.00 | 45 | 3 | C+ (2.3) | 2.96 | -0.04 ▼ |
| 3.00 | 15 | 3 | A (4.0) | 3.11 | +0.11 ▲ |
| 3.00 | 15 | 3 | C+ (2.3) | 2.89 | -0.11 ▼ |
| 2.50 | 30 | 3 | B (3.0) | 2.55 | +0.05 ▲ |
| 3.50 | 60 | 3 | B (3.0) | 3.48 | -0.02 ▼ |
The Simple Rule Every Student Should Know
Your course grade and your current GPA are in direct competition. The rule is:
If your grade point is above your current GPA, your GPA rises. If it is below, your GPA falls. If it matches, your GPA does not move.
This means a B (3.0) does different things to different students. For a student with a 2.7 GPA, it is a boost. For a student with a 3.3 GPA, it is a drag. Same grade, opposite effects.
Why the size of the change is so small in later years
Imagine you have 45 credits at a 3.0 GPA. That is 135 quality points. Adding a 3-credit course with a 4.0 grade adds 12 quality points to a total of 147. Your new GPA is 147 / 48 = 3.0625. Not much.
Now imagine you only have 15 credits at 3.0 (45 quality points). The same 3-credit A adds 12 to a total of 57 quality points over 18 credits = 3.17. Much more impact. The fewer credits you have, the more volatile your GPA is to each new course.
How to Use This Information Strategically
Figuring out your floor
Use the grade sweep table to find the lowest grade you can get in this course before your GPA drops below a threshold you care about. Maybe a 3.0 is your floor for scholarship eligibility. Maybe 2.0 is your floor for staying enrolled. The table tells you exactly which grade takes you below those lines.
Comparing courses by credit weight
Try this: use the calculator for a 3-credit course, then change the credits to 6. Watch the GPA change double. A 6-credit course has exactly twice the impact of a 3-credit course with the same grade. This tells you where to prioritise your study time across a semester. Heavy-credit courses deserve more of your attention.
Planning course loads strategically
Some students take easier electives to protect their GPA. Before doing this, check the actual numbers. A single 1-credit easy course with an A barely moves a 3.0 GPA at all if you have 60 credits. Taking a harder 6-credit course and getting a B+ does far more for your GPA than stacking easy 1-credit courses with As.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will a B grade raise or lower my GPA?
A B is worth 3.0 grade points on the Canadian 4.0 scale. If your current GPA is below 3.0, a B raises it. If your current GPA is above 3.0, a B lowers it. If your GPA is exactly 3.0, a B holds it steady. The calculator above shows you the exact number either way.
How much does one course change my GPA?
Very little if you have many credits, and noticeably if you have few. With 60 credits completed, even a perfect A in a 3-credit course raises a 3.0 GPA by only 0.016. With 15 credits, the same A raises it by 0.11. Use the calculator with your actual numbers for a precise answer.
If my grade equals my current GPA, does it change?
No. A grade exactly equal to your current GPA has zero net effect on your cumulative GPA, regardless of how many credits the course carries. It is a mathematical certainty, not a coincidence.
Does a dropped or audited course count?
No. Courses that are officially dropped before the deadline or taken on an audit basis do not receive a letter grade and therefore do not affect your GPA. Only completed courses with a letter grade count in the GPA calculation.
What about a pass/fail course?
Pass/fail or credit/no-credit courses at most Canadian universities do not factor into your GPA. A pass adds credits to your degree requirements but does not affect your grade point average. A no-credit result also does not count toward your GPA, but check your specific institution’s policy.