UK Grade Boundary Calculator

Grade Boundary Calculator | How Far Am I From the Next Grade?

Grade Boundary Calculator

See exactly how many marks separate you from every grade boundary above and below your score.

Must be 0 or more
Must be at least 1
Your current grade
Boundary summary
Based on your score and the maximum marks available
Distance to every grade boundary
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How This Calculator Works

A grade boundary is the minimum percentage required to achieve a particular grade. This calculator takes your raw mark, converts it to a percentage, identifies which grade band you are in, and then calculates precisely how many marks and percentage points separate you from every boundary above and below your score.

// Step 1: Convert your raw mark to a percentage
Your % = (Your Mark / Max Mark) x 100

// Step 2: Find your current grade boundary
Current Grade = Boundary Scale lookup(Your %)

// Step 3: Calculate gap to each boundary
Gap to Grade X (%) = Boundary X – Your %
Gap to Grade X (marks) = Gap % x (Max Mark / 100)

// Example: 68/80 = 85% (Grade 8 at GCSE)
Gap to Grade 9: 90% – 85% = 5% = 4 marks on an 80-mark paper
About boundaries used here: The thresholds in this calculator (for example, 80% for Grade 8 or Grade A) are typical approximations based on widely referenced patterns across AQA, Edexcel, and OCR. Real boundaries are set after each exam series and differ by subject and year. Use this tool to understand your position; always check your exam board’s official document for confirmed results.

Why Grade Boundaries Matter

Most students focus on their total mark without knowing how close they are to a grade change. The difference between a Grade 5 and Grade 6 might be just 3 or 4 marks on a single paper. Knowing that gap in advance changes how you revise.

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If you scored 76/100 and need 80% for a Grade A, you know you need 4 more marks. That is specific. It tells you exactly how many extra questions you need to answer correctly, or how many marks of partial credit you need to pick up.

Table of Truth: Common Scores and Boundary Gaps

Your MarkMax MarkYour %GCSE GradeMarks to next grade up
728090%9At top (Grade 9)
668082.5%86 marks to Grade 9
588072.5%76 marks to Grade 8
508062.5%66 marks to Grade 7
428052.5%56 marks to Grade 6
348042.5%46 marks to Grade 5
268032.5%36 marks to Grade 4

Note: on an 80-mark paper, each 10% boundary gap equals exactly 8 marks. Boundaries shift with paper difficulty, so always verify official boundaries after results day.

A Level Grade Boundary Examples

Your MarkMax MarkYour %A Level GradeMarks to next grade
9210092%A*At top
8410084%A6 marks to A*
7410074%B6 marks to A
6410064%C6 marks to B
5410054%D6 marks to C
4410044%E6 marks to D
The 10% rule of thumb: On most UK exam papers, each full grade boundary sits roughly 10 percentage points apart. On a 100-mark paper that is 10 marks per grade. On an 80-mark paper it is 8 marks. On a 90-mark paper it is 9 marks. This is a useful mental shortcut; the calculator above gives the exact figure.
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How Boundaries Are Actually Set

After the exam, not before

Grade boundaries are not fixed in advance. After every exam series, the relevant exam board (AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, or CCEA) marks scripts and sets boundaries based on the difficulty of that year’s paper and the performance of the national cohort. A harder paper results in lower boundaries. An easier paper results in higher boundaries.

Who sets them

Each exam board has a team of senior examiners who review a representative sample of scripts. They identify where a Grade 4, Grade 7, or Grade A performance genuinely sits, then work backward to establish the minimum mark required. The process is designed to maintain grade standards across years, even when papers differ.

Why they differ by subject

A Grade A in English Literature might sit at 68%, while the same grade in Maths requires 78%. Different subjects have different natural distributions of student performance, different marking schemes, and different paper designs. There is no single boundary that applies across all subjects.

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When they are published

GCSE and A Level grade boundaries are published by each exam board on results day in August. Some exam boards also publish boundaries for January series (for applicable A Level units). They are freely available on the exam board websites and are worth checking if you are considering a re-mark or resit.

Using Boundary Information for Revision

Knowing your boundary gaps is only useful if you act on it. Here is how to convert the numbers into a revision plan.

If you are 1 to 5 marks from the next boundary

This is genuinely very close. A small shift in exam technique or one or two extra marks on partial-credit questions can close this gap. Focus on the mark scheme for your subject: how does the examiner award marks? Where are students leaving marks on the table?

If you are 6 to 15 marks from the next boundary

This is achievable but requires targeted effort. Identify the question types where you consistently lose marks and work specifically on those. Do not try to revise everything; go narrow and deep on your weakest areas.

If you are more than 15 marks away

This requires a sustained revision effort over several weeks. Set an interim target of halving the gap before your exam. Use past papers under timed conditions and review every mark you drop.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find the official grade boundaries for my subject?
After results day in August, all major exam boards publish their grade boundaries publicly. Visit aqa.org.uk for AQA, qualifications.pearson.com for Edexcel, ocr.org.uk for OCR, and wjec.co.uk for WJEC. Search “grade boundaries” and the year of your exam. You can find exact marks required for each grade in your specific subject and specification.
Do boundaries change every year?
Yes, every year. Boundaries move based on paper difficulty and national cohort performance. In a hard year for Maths, the Grade 7 boundary might drop from 70% to 63%. In an easier year it might rise to 74%. The typical percentage thresholds in this calculator are averages across years; the actual boundary for your specific exam will differ.
Can I ask for a re-mark if I am just below a boundary?
Yes. If you are within a few marks of the next boundary, you can request a clerical check (checking the mark total is correct) or a review of marking. These are called “post-results services” and are available through your school. A clerical check costs around £10-20 and is refunded if the grade changes. A marking review costs more but can result in a grade change. Speak to your exams officer before the deadline, usually a few weeks after results day.
Are GCSE and A Level boundaries the same across all exam boards?
No. AQA, Edexcel, OCR, and WJEC set their own boundaries independently for each subject and specification. A Grade B in AQA Chemistry might require 72%, while the same grade from Edexcel Chemistry might require 69% in the same year, depending on how their respective papers were graded. Always check the specific exam board for your subject.
What is the difference between a grade boundary and a UMS score?
Raw marks are the actual marks you scored on a paper. UMS (Uniform Mark Scale) scores are a standardised conversion that some older modular A Level specifications used to compare marks across different papers and years. Most current linear A Level and GCSE qualifications (post-2017 reform) use raw marks and raw grade boundaries. You likely do not need to think about UMS unless you are sitting a legacy qualification.
My mock gave me 64%. What GCSE grade is that?
Based on typical grade boundaries, 64% sits in the Grade 6 band (60-69%). That said, mock papers often use slightly different boundaries from actual exams, and your teacher may apply their own boundary adjustments. Use this as a guide rather than a definitive prediction. What matters more is the gap between your mock score and the Grade 7 boundary (70%), which at 64% is about 6 percentage points.

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