Resit Grade Improvement Calculator
Find out what score you need on your resit to move up a grade, and whether it is realistically worth doing.
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How This Calculator Works
When you resit a GCSE or A Level, your new mark replaces your original one (or in some cases the higher mark is taken). The question this tool answers is simple: given where you currently sit on the grade scale, what percentage do you need on your resit to land in the next grade band?
Target Boundary % = Minimum % required for your target grade
// Step 2: Calculate required improvement
Required % on resit = Target Boundary %
(For a full resit, you need the overall % across all papers)
// Step 3: Convert to raw marks if max mark is known
Required Raw Mark = (Required % / 100) x Max Marks
// Step 4: Assess feasibility
Gap = Required % – Your Current %
Effort Rating = lookup(Gap)
Is a Resit Worth It? A Practical Framework
Not every resit makes sense. The decision depends on three things: how large the grade gap is, how much your current score needs to change, and whether the grade improvement matters for your next step.
When a resit is clearly worth it
You are one grade below a requirement that actually blocks you. A student with a Grade 3 in English who needs a Grade 4 to start an apprenticeship has a clear reason to resit. Similarly, an A Level student with a Grade D who needs a Grade C for their university offer has a real stake in the outcome.
When a resit is probably not worth it
You are two or more grades below your target and the gap is more than 20 percentage points. This is not impossible, but it requires a fundamentally different level of preparation. In most cases, students in this position are better served by redirecting energy toward other qualifications or pathways rather than betting on a large jump from a single resit.
When it depends
You are one grade below but the improvement required is 8 to 15 percentage points. This is genuinely achievable with focused effort over several months. Whether it is worth doing depends on how much the grade change affects your options and how much time you realistically have to prepare.
Table of Truth: Common Resit Scenarios
| Current Grade | Target Grade | Current % | Required % | Gap | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GCSE 3 | GCSE 4 | 35% | 40% | 5% | Very achievable |
| GCSE 4 | GCSE 5 | 45% | 50% | 5% | Achievable |
| GCSE 5 | GCSE 6 | 52% | 60% | 8% | Achievable with work |
| GCSE 6 | GCSE 7 | 62% | 70% | 8% | Challenging |
| GCSE 4 | GCSE 7 | 45% | 70% | 25% | Very hard |
| A Level D | A Level C | 52% | 60% | 8% | Achievable with work |
| A Level C | A Level B | 62% | 70% | 8% | Challenging |
| A Level D | A Level A | 52% | 80% | 28% | Very hard |
GCSE Resit Rules in England
Students who do not achieve a Grade 4 in English Language or Maths by the end of Year 11 are required to continue studying and resitting these subjects as part of their post-16 education. This applies whether they go to sixth form, college, or an apprenticeship programme.
For voluntary resits (subjects other than English and Maths, or students who already have a Grade 4), students typically resit through their school, college, or as a private candidate. The main resit series runs in June each year. A November series is available for English Language and Maths only.
A Level Resit Rules
A Level resits are less straightforward. Most current A Level qualifications are linear, meaning all exams are taken at the end of Year 13. To resit, a student typically has to retake the full set of papers in the following June series. Partial resits (individual papers) may not be available depending on the exam board and specification.
How Much Can You Realistically Improve?
Research on resit outcomes suggests that most students who resit GCSE English and Maths achieve a Grade 4, but significant grade jumps (3 or more grades) are uncommon without a substantial change in preparation approach.
Small gaps (1 to 8 percentage points)
These are genuinely within reach for most students with 8 to 12 weeks of focused revision. Targeted work on weak areas, regular past paper practice under timed conditions, and attention to mark scheme feedback can close gaps of this size reliably.
Medium gaps (8 to 18 percentage points)
Achievable, but requires consistent effort over 3 to 6 months. Students in this range typically need to address gaps in fundamental understanding, not just exam technique. A structured study plan with a tutor or online resources is often the difference between succeeding and stalling.
Large gaps (18+ percentage points)
Possible but unlikely without a major change in preparation. If your original result reflected genuine knowledge gaps rather than just exam technique issues, closing an 18%+ gap in one resit cycle is genuinely difficult. Be honest with yourself about whether a resit is the best use of your time versus an alternative pathway.