Iceland Cumulative GPA Calculator
Add your courses semester by semester. Your cumulative meðaleinkunn updates at the top as you type.
How Cumulative GPA Works in Iceland
Your cumulative meðaleinkunn is a weighted average of every course you have taken across every semester of your degree. It is not the average of your semester GPAs. It weights each course by its ECTS credit value relative to your total credits earned.
Example across two semesters:
Semester 1: 7.5 × 6 + 8.0 × 6 + 6.5 × 4 = 45 + 48 + 26 = 119 (16 credits)
Semester 2: 9.0 × 6 + 7.0 × 4 + 8.5 × 6 = 54 + 28 + 51 = 133 (16 credits)
Cumulative GPA = (119 + 133) / (16 + 16) = 252 / 32 = 7.88
Semester 1 average: 7.44
Semester 2 average: 8.31
Simple average of those two: 7.88 (same here because equal credits)
But with unequal credits, only the cumulative formula is correct.
Table of Truth: Sample Cumulative Calculations
| Semester | Sem GPA | Credits | Running Cumulative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7.50 | 28 | 7.50 |
| 2 | 8.00 | 32 | 7.77 |
| 3 | 6.80 | 30 | 7.44 |
| 4 | 7.90 | 30 | 7.55 |
| 5 | 8.50 | 30 | 7.78 |
| 6 | 9.00 | 30 | 8.02 |
Icelandic Scholarship Thresholds
Most Icelandic merit scholarships and postgraduate requirements are based on cumulative meðaleinkunn. Here are the key thresholds and what they mean in practice:
| Cumulative GPA | ECTS Grade | Typical Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| 9.0 and above | A | Top academic prizes; doctoral fellowships |
| 7.5 to 8.9 | B | Most merit scholarships; competitive postgraduate programs |
| 7.0 to 7.4 | C+ | Some scholarships; standard master’s entry |
| 6.5 to 6.9 | C | Standard postgraduate entry at most institutions |
| 5.5 to 6.4 | D | Passes all courses; limited scholarship eligibility |
| 5.0 to 5.4 | E | Minimum pass; no scholarship eligibility |
| Below 5.0 | F | Not passing; academic intervention required |
Edge Cases and Real Questions
Should I include failed courses I later retook?
That depends on your institution’s policy. Háskóli Íslands and most Icelandic universities either replace the failed grade with the resit grade, or include both. Check your transcript policy with your faculty office. If the failed grade is on your transcript and is included in the official calculation, include it here for accuracy.
How do I handle a semester with an incomplete grade?
Do not include incomplete courses in this calculator. An incomplete (I) grade is not a final grade and should not be part of your cumulative calculation until it is resolved. Once the final grade is issued, add it to the relevant semester.
I transferred credits from another institution. Do they count?
Transferred credits that have been formally recognised and assigned a grade by your Icelandic institution should be included. Transferred credits recognised without a grade, which is common, typically count toward your credit total for graduation but are excluded from the meðaleinkunn calculation. Check your official transcript to see how each transferred course is recorded.
Why is my cumulative GPA different from the simple average of my course grades?
Because courses have different credit values. A 10-credit dissertation contributes five times more to your cumulative GPA than a 2-credit elective. The weighted average gives each grade its proportional influence based on the credit weight it carries. A simple average treats all courses equally, which is wrong.
My cumulative GPA is just below 7.5. Can I still recover it?
Yes, if you have enough credits remaining. Use the meðaleinkunn impact calculator on SabiCalculator to model exactly what grades you need in upcoming courses to push your average above 7.5. The more credits you have already earned, the harder it is to move the average significantly, so start modelling early rather than waiting until your final semester.
Does the order I enter semesters change the result?
No. The cumulative weighted average formula is commutative. You can enter your semesters in any order and the final result will be identical. The semester history panel in this calculator shows each semester in the order you entered, but the cumulative figure at the top is always mathematically correct regardless of order.
Common Mistakes When Calculating Cumulative GPA
- Averaging semester GPAs instead of recalculating from all course-level data
- Including incomplete or in-progress courses
- Forgetting to include failed courses that are still on the transcript
- Using simple credits (all equal) instead of ECTS-weighted credits
- Treating exchange or transfer credits as equivalent when they carry no grade
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between semester GPA and cumulative GPA in Iceland?
Semester GPA is the weighted average of courses completed in a single semester only. Cumulative GPA (cumulative meðaleinkunn) is the weighted average of every course completed across your entire degree to date. Universities and scholarship bodies typically ask for the cumulative figure.
How many ECTS credits does a full Icelandic degree require?
A standard bachelor’s degree requires 180 ECTS (three years, 60 per year, 30 per semester). A master’s degree adds 60 to 120 ECTS. A doctoral degree adds a further 180 ECTS. Each full-time semester should yield approximately 30 ECTS if you are on a standard course load.
Can I use this calculator for high school (menntaskóli) grades?
Yes. Icelandic menntaskólar use the same 0–10 scale and ECTS-style credit weighting. You can use this calculator to compute your cumulative average across all secondary school years for university application purposes.
What cumulative GPA do I need for the University of Iceland master’s programs?
Most master’s programs at Háskóli Íslands require a minimum cumulative meðaleinkunn of 6.5 for standard entry. Competitive programs, particularly in law, medicine, and engineering, often expect 7.0 or above. Specific programs may publish higher minimum requirements. Check the program’s official admission requirements rather than assuming the general minimum applies.
For official records, always confirm with your institution’s student portal.