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France GPA Calculator: Convert /20 to US 4.0

Convert French university notes from the 0-20 scale to a credit-weighted average with mention classification (Tres Bien, Bien) and US 4.0 GPA equivalent for graduate applications.

French University Grade Calculator (0 to 20 Scale)

Enter each module with its note (0 to 20) and ECTS credit value. The calculator weights each note by its ECTS credits, producing your weighted average, the mention (honour) classification, and a US 4.0 GPA equivalent.

Module Note (/20) ECTS Credits
Weighted Average (Moyenne Ponderee) 0.00 / 20
US 4.0 Equivalent: 0.00
Modules0
ECTS Total0
Percentage0%
French grading scale reference (mention, ECTS letter, US GPA)
Note Range (/20) Mention ECTS Letter US GPA (Approx.)
18.00 to 20.00Tres Bien (tres bien)A4.00
16.00 to 17.99Tres Bien (tres bien)B3.50 to 4.00
14.00 to 15.99Bien (good)C3.00 to 3.50
12.00 to 13.99Assez Bien (fairly good)D2.50 to 3.00
10.00 to 11.99Passable (satisfactory)E2.00 to 2.50
0.00 to 9.99Ajourne (fail)Fx / FBelow 2.00

Mention thresholds per French Ministry of National Education and the Bologna Process ECTS grading framework. Pass mark: 10/20. ECTS letter equivalences follow the standard European A to F band definitions (A = top 10%, B = next 25%, C = next 30%, D = next 25%, E = bottom 10% of passers). US GPA equivalences use the piecewise conversion documented in the WES reference table. Last verified: 2026-05-26.

How the French Grading System Works (Grade Calculator on the 0 to 20 Scale)

The French 0 to 20 scale (echelle de notation sur 20) is one of the most consistently rigorous grading systems in Europe. Unlike the North American 4.0 scale, the French scale is not inflated: a 20/20 is theoretically perfect and is almost never awarded in practice. Professors at French universities treat the scale as an absolute standard rather than a relative ranking, so a 15/20 genuinely means excellent work regardless of what the rest of the class scored.

Most students in competitive programmes at institutions such as Sciences Po, Sorbonne Universite, Universite Paris-Saclay, or the Ecole Polytechnique score between 10 and 14. A grade above 15 is strong by any French academic standard. This grade compression is intentional: French academic culture views 20 as the theoretical maximum, not as a reasonable goal for a dedicated student.

The minimum passing grade is 10/20. Grades below 10 result in Ajourne (fail), which in most French university systems requires retaking the module during the resit session (session de rattrapage) or repeating the semester. However, many French universities apply a compensation rule: if your weighted average across the full semester exceeds 10/20, individual modules below 10 may be compensated by strong performance elsewhere, and you pass the semester without retaking those modules. This compensation mechanism is one detail that frequently confuses foreign credential evaluators reading French transcripts.

French Weighted Average Formula (Moyenne Ponderee)
Weighted Average = Sum of (Note x ECTS Credits) across all modules Total ECTS Credits
Where:
  • Note = French grade on the 0 to 20 scale for each module (e.g. 13.5, 16, 9)
  • ECTS Credits = European Credit Transfer System value for each module (typically 3, 4, 5, or 6 ECTS per module; 30 ECTS per semester)
  • Sum = total across every graded module in the calculation period
Example: A student has three modules: Histoire (6 ECTS, note 14), Droit constitutionnel (6 ECTS, note 12), and Anglais (3 ECTS, note 16). Weighted average = (14x6 + 12x6 + 16x3) / (6+6+3) = (84 + 72 + 48) / 15 = 204 / 15 = 13.60 (Mention Assez Bien, US 4.0 equivalent: 2.90).

French Mention (Honour) Classifications on the Licence and Master

The mention system awards academic distinctions on the Licence (180 ECTS, three-year bachelor equivalent), Master (120 ECTS, two years), and Doctorat certificates. The distinction is based on the final ECTS-weighted average and appears on the official diploma and the Diploma Supplement that French universities issue alongside the degree.

French degree mention classifications with weighted average thresholds and international equivalents
Mention French Name Weighted Average US Honour Equivalent UK Classification
Very GoodTres Bien16.00 / 20 and aboveSumma Cum LaudeFirst Class Honours
GoodBien14.00 to 15.99Magna Cum LaudeUpper Second (2:1)
Fairly GoodAssez Bien12.00 to 13.99Cum LaudeLower Second (2:2)
SatisfactoryPassable10.00 to 11.99PassThird Class / Pass
FailAjourneBelow 10.00FailFail

The Baccalaureat uses a slightly different mention structure at the secondary level, where Mention Tres Bien with Congratulations of the Jury (felicitations du jury) is awarded for averages above 18. University degrees do not use the felicitations category, so the highest distinction on a Licence or Master is Mention Tres Bien at 16 and above.

Converting French Grades to a US 4.0 GPA

The core difficulty in converting French grades to a US GPA is that the two systems compress performance differently. The French scale places all passing performance between 10 and 20, so 10 is not a 50 percent equivalent in US terms. A French student scoring 10/20 has passed a rigorous course; a US student scoring 50 percent has failed. Applying a straight linear formula (note / 20 x 4.0) would put a perfectly respectable 12/20 at a 2.4 US GPA, far below how admissions officers familiar with French transcripts actually interpret that score.

French Note to US 4.0 GPA Piecewise Conversion

US GPA = 3.5 + ((note - 16) / 4) x 0.5 [for note 16 to 20]

Where:
  • For note 14 to 15.99: US GPA = 3.0 + ((note - 14) / 2) x 0.5
  • For note 12 to 13.99: US GPA = 2.5 + ((note - 12) / 2) x 0.5
  • For note 10 to 11.99: US GPA = 2.0 + ((note - 10) / 2) x 0.5
  • For note below 10: US GPA = (note / 10) x 2.0
Example: A student with a weighted average of 13.60 falls in the 12 to 14 band: US GPA = 2.5 + ((13.60 - 12) / 2) x 0.5 = 2.5 + (1.60 / 2) x 0.5 = 2.5 + 0.40 = 2.90. The calculator above applies this piecewise formula to the weighted average automatically.
French note to US GPA piecewise conversion reference table
French Note (/20) Mention ECTS Letter US GPA (Approx.) US Letter Grade
18.00 to 20.00Tres BienA4.00A / A+
16.00 to 17.99Tres BienB3.50 to 4.00A / A-
14.00 to 15.99BienC3.00 to 3.50B+ / B
12.00 to 13.99Assez BienD2.50 to 3.00B- / C+
10.00 to 11.99PassableE2.00 to 2.50C / C+
Below 10.00AjourneFx / FBelow 2.00F / D

For formal US graduate school applications, World Education Services (WES) produces a course-by-course US GPA from French transcripts. WES uses a proprietary conversion table, and the result can differ from the piecewise estimate above by 0.1 to 0.3 GPA depending on the source institution and degree type. The calculator above provides a self-planning estimate; consult WES or Educational Credential Evaluators (ECE) for binding applications. See also the GPA converter for other international scales, or the US GPA calculator to check what US GPA you need for specific programmes.

ECTS Credits and the LMD System in French Higher Education

French higher education is organised under the LMD framework (Licence, Master, Doctorat), adopted as part of the 2002 Bologna Process reforms. The system uses ECTS credits throughout. A Licence requires 180 ECTS over three years (six semesters of 30 ECTS each). A Master requires 120 additional ECTS over two years. A Doctorat does not use ECTS in the same way, as it is primarily research-based; most PhD programmes at French universities follow a three-year minimum beyond the Master.

Individual module ECTS values reflect the total expected workload, not just contact hours. A 6-ECTS lecture module might involve 42 hours of classroom instruction plus roughly 120 hours of independent study, for a total of around 150 to 180 hours. The ECTS weight directly determines a module's contribution to the weighted average: a 6-ECTS module at 14/20 contributes twice as much as a 3-ECTS module at the same note.

Most French public universities publish the ECTS values for each module in the programme handbook (maquette pedagogique) and on the official transcript. If your transcript does not show ECTS values directly, the programme coordinator or the registrar (service de scolarite) can provide a supplementary document.

Grandes Ecoles and Alternative Grading Conventions

The Grandes Ecoles (Ecole Polytechnique, ENS, HEC Paris, Sciences Po, Centrale, MINES ParisTech) operate outside the mainstream university system and sometimes use grading conventions that differ from the standard 0-20 public university scale.

HEC Paris, ESSEC, and most other business Grandes Ecoles use the 0-20 scale but with notably stricter averages: a 13/20 at HEC Paris places a student firmly in the top tier of their cohort. Sciences Po Paris awards grades on a 0-20 scale at the Paris campus but its regional campuses (Reims, Menton, Nancy, Poitiers, Lyon, Toulouse) may apply slightly different practices for some courses. ENS (Ecole Normale Superieure) in Paris and Lyon grade on the standard 0-20 scale but averages for the most selective programmes are typically lower than at general universities, as the student cohort is drawn from the top of national competitive examinations (concours).

Ecole Polytechnique (l'X) historically used a different ranking-based system for internal purposes, but its official transcripts for the engineering degree (Ingenieur Polytechnicien Programme) issue standard 0-20 grades to meet the Bologna Diploma Supplement requirement. If your transcript comes from a Grande Ecole preparation class (classe preparatoire aux grandes ecoles, CPGE), note that CPGE grades are generally not comparable to university grades. A 10/20 in CPGE is often equivalent to a top-tier performance at a regular university, and credential evaluators adjust accordingly.

Calculated Grades and the Compensation Rule

French universities apply the compensation principle differently depending on the institution and degree level, but the most common rule is: if your weighted average across a semester or academic year is at or above 10/20, you pass the period regardless of individual module failures below 10. This means a 9/20 in one module can be compensated by a 14/20 in a heavier module.

Some programmes cap compensation at a floor of 7/20 per module, below which no compensation is possible. Medical, pharmacy, and law programmes often do not apply compensation at all: every module must pass independently, and failures require resit exams (examens de rattrapages). Grandes Ecoles generally do not apply compensation between modules in different semester blocks.

For transcript readers and credential evaluators, this creates a specific problem: a French transcript showing a 9/20 in one module alongside a final semester average of 11/20 means the student passed the semester, even though the 9 would normally indicate failure. The grade calculator on this page calculates your weighted average as entered; whether compensation applies to your specific programme is a question for your registrar. For a grade percentage reference, see the main conversion guide.

What Counts as a Good Grade at French Universities

Context matters more in the French system than in most other national systems, because French grading does not adjust to the student population. The following thresholds reflect the general consensus among French academic advisors and credential evaluators:

  • 16.00 and above (Mention Tres Bien): exceptional; competitive for doctoral programmes, ENS agreg, and top master applications at Sciences Po and Paris-Saclay; rare in most undergraduate cohorts.
  • 14.00 to 15.99 (Mention Bien): very strong; qualifies for selective master programmes at French and European universities and for major merit scholarships such as the Eiffel Excellence Scholarship for foreign students.
  • 12.00 to 13.99 (Mention Assez Bien): solid and respectable; meets the admission threshold for most French master programmes and is competitive for Erasmus+ and other European mobility grants.
  • 10.00 to 11.99 (Mention Passable): passing; sufficient for degree completion but below the threshold for selective master admissions at most research universities.
  • Below 10.00 (Ajourne): fail; requires resit or programme repetition unless semester-level compensation applies.

French universities do not publish class rank on the official transcript. The absence of rank means that for international applications, the mention and the weighted average on the transcript carry more weight than they might in a system where rank percentiles are provided. A Mention Bien on a French Master is a strong signal on its own.

Data Sources and Last Verified

Grading scale, mention threshold, and ECTS credit data on this page are drawn from the French Ministry of National Education (Ministere de l'Education nationale), the Bologna Process Diploma Supplement guidelines, the World Education Services France reference, and the Scholaro France country grading profile. ECTS workload estimates follow the Bologna Process specification (60 ECTS per academic year, 25 to 30 hours per credit). Piecewise US GPA conversion methodology follows the WES reference table and Scholaro proportional mapping. Last verified: 2026-05-26.

This France grade calculator estimates your ECTS-weighted average and US GPA equivalent based on the formulas described above. French universities apply institution-specific compensation rules, resit policies, jury discretion, and CPGE-to-university transition norms that this calculator cannot account for. Always verify your weighted average against your official transcript and your programme regulations. For binding US graduate-school applications, use a course-by-course evaluation from World Education Services (WES) or a NACES-member organisation. For GPA planning in the US system, see the GPA calculator and the international GPA converter.

How does the French grading system work?
French universities grade on a scale of 0 to 20 (the echelle de notation sur 20). A grade of 10/20 is the minimum passing mark. The system is not inflated: a 20/20 is theoretically perfect and essentially never awarded; most students in competitive programmes score between 10 and 14. The diploma mention (distinction) is awarded based on the final weighted average: Mention Tres Bien for 16 and above, Mention Bien for 14 to 15.99, Mention Assez Bien for 12 to 13.99, and Mention Passable for 10 to 11.99. Grades below 10 result in Ajourne (fail) and typically require repeating the module or the academic year. The grade average is weighted by ECTS credits, so modules carrying more credits have a proportionally larger effect on the result.
How do I calculate GPA for French university grades?
How to calculate GPA for French university grades: multiply each module note (0 to 20) by its ECTS credit value, sum the products across all modules, then divide by the total ECTS credits. The formula is Weighted Average = Sum(Note x ECTS Credits) / Sum(ECTS Credits). For example, a student with a 14 in a 6-ECTS module, a 12 in a 4-ECTS module, and a 16 in a 5-ECTS module has a weighted average of (14x6 + 12x4 + 16x5) / (6+4+5) = (84 + 48 + 80) / 15 = 212 / 15 = 14.13, which earns Mention Bien. Enter each module with its note and ECTS value in the calculator above to get the weighted average, mention classification, and US 4.0 equivalent automatically.
How do I convert a French grade to a US 4.0 GPA?
Converting a French grade to a US 4.0 GPA requires a piecewise conversion because the two scales compress performance differently. The standard piecewise mapping is: 16 to 20 maps to 3.5 to 4.0, 14 to 15.99 maps to 3.0 to 3.5, 12 to 13.99 maps to 2.5 to 3.0, 10 to 11.99 maps to 2.0 to 2.5, and below 10 maps to below 2.0. A simple linear formula (note / 20 x 4.0) underestimates French grades significantly because it places a passing 10/20 at only 2.0 on the US scale, ignoring that 10/20 represents solid academic performance in the French context. For formal applications, World Education Services (WES) produces an authoritative course-by-course evaluation; WES typically converts a French 14/20 to approximately a 3.0 US GPA.
What is Mention Tres Bien in France?
Mention Tres Bien (Very Good) is the highest French academic distinction, awarded when the final weighted average is 16.00 or above out of 20. It appears on the Licence, Master, and Doctorat diploma and official transcript. In practice, receiving Mention Tres Bien at Sciences Po, Universite Paris-Saclay, Sorbonne, or any French grande ecole signals genuinely exceptional performance, as French grading intentionally resists inflation. US graduate admissions committees familiar with French transcripts understand that a 16+ average is roughly equivalent to Summa Cum Laude in the US system or First Class Honours in the UK. Mention Bien (14 to 15.99) is the second-highest distinction, roughly equivalent to Magna Cum Laude or an upper-second UK classification.
Do French universities use ECTS credits?
Yes. French universities participate in the Bologna Process and use ECTS (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System) credits throughout the LMD (Licence, Master, Doctorat) degree structure. A full academic year is worth 60 ECTS credits and a semester carries 30 ECTS. A Licence (the bachelor equivalent) requires 180 ECTS over three years, and a Master requires an additional 120 ECTS over two years. Individual modules typically carry 3, 4, 5, or 6 ECTS depending on their weekly contact hours and expected workload, with 1 ECTS representing roughly 25 to 30 hours of total student work. The ECTS weight of each module determines how much it moves the weighted average, so a 6-ECTS core lecture contributes twice as much as a 3-ECTS seminar.
How does WES evaluate French transcripts for US applications?
World Education Services (WES) is the most widely accepted credential evaluator for French graduates applying to US and Canadian universities. WES applies a course-by-course evaluation using its own proprietary conversion table. As a general reference, WES typically converts a French weighted average of 14/20 to approximately a 3.0 US GPA and a 16/20 to approximately 3.7. The exact result depends on the issuing institution and degree type, and WES sometimes shifts cutoffs by 0.1 to 0.3 GPA based on institutional context. For US applications, Educational Credential Evaluators (ECE) and SpanTran are accepted alternatives at most graduate programmes. French universities issue bilingual transcripts (French and English) on request, so certified translation is rarely required for the transcript itself.