Calculate your UK university grade
Enter each module with its credit value and the mark you earned. The result is the credit-weighted average for the year and your matching UK classification.
UK degree classification reference
| Classification | Percentage | US 4.0 GPA (rough) |
|---|---|---|
| First Class Honours (1st) | 70 percent and above | 4.0 |
| Upper Second Class (2:1) | 60 to 69 percent | 3.5 to 3.7 |
| Lower Second Class (2:2) | 50 to 59 percent | 3.0 to 3.3 |
| Third Class (3rd) | 40 to 49 percent | 2.0 to 2.7 |
| Ordinary Degree (Pass) | 35 to 39 percent | roughly 2.0 |
| Fail | below 35 percent | below 2.0 |
Standard UK classification thresholds (Russell Group, post-92, and most other UK universities). Cambridge and a small number of programmes use slight variants. The US 4.0 GPA equivalents are rough WES-style approximations; expect an official credential evaluation to land within 0.1 to 0.2 points of these bands.
How the UK Uni Grade Calculator Works
The UK uni grade calculator above runs two formulas, one per mode, on the standard British university model. Module Average mode handles a single year of study: enter every module with its credit value (10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 60, or 120) and the mark percentage you earned, and the calculator returns the credit-weighted year average and the matching UK classification (First, 2:1, 2:2, Third, or Pass). Year Weighting mode handles the multi-year aggregation: pick a year-weighting preset (3-year standard, 3-year 40:60 split, 4-year with placement, or 4-year integrated masters), enter your year averages, and the calculator returns the final degree percentage and the classification you would graduate with on those numbers.
Below the calculator, this page covers the five UK degree classifications and their thresholds, the standard module credit values used across UK programmes, year-weighting models for 3-year and 4-year degrees, the Weighted Average Mark (WAM) terminology some universities use internally, dissertation and final-project weighting, how UK marks compare to a US 4.0 GPA for graduate-school applicants, and the most common borderline rules (resit caps, condonement, and rounding). The Frequently Asked Questions answer the most common UK uni grade questions captured from People-Also-Ask boxes on Google UK.
UK Degree Classifications and the Grading Scale
UK universities classify undergraduate degrees into five honours bands plus a Pass-only ordinary degree. The thresholds below are standard across the Russell Group, post-92 universities, and most other British institutions; Cambridge applies its own classification system and a small number of programmes use slightly different borderline rules.
| Classification | Mark Range | Common Shorthand | What It Means |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Class Honours | 70 percent and above | 1st, First | Top tier; competitive for graduate study and research funding |
| Upper Second Class | 60 to 69 percent | 2:1 (two-one) | Strong honours; minimum for most graduate programmes and graduate-scheme employers |
| Lower Second Class | 50 to 59 percent | 2:2 (two-two, "Desmond") | Honours degree; meets the graduation minimum at most universities |
| Third Class | 40 to 49 percent | 3rd, Third | Honours degree at the lower threshold; passes most degree programmes |
| Ordinary Degree (Pass) | 35 to 39 percent | Pass | Awarded without honours; below the honours threshold |
| Fail | below 35 percent | Fail | Resit, condonement, or compensation may apply per programme regulations |
Most UK graduate-scheme employers (the major banking, consulting, and Civil Service Fast Stream programmes) require a 2:1 or above as a minimum entry standard. Most Master's programmes require a 2:1 or above for direct entry; some accept 2:2 with relevant work experience or a strong personal statement. PhD programmes typically expect a First or a strong 2:1 for funded places.
UK Module Credits (10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 60, 120)
UK universities use a credit-weighted system inherited from the Quality Assurance Agency framework. A standard undergraduate year carries 120 credits; a typical single-semester module is 15 or 20 credits, a full-year module is 30 or 40 credits, and a final-year dissertation is usually 30 or 60 credits. The credit value of a module is the multiplier the calculator applies when computing the year average; a 60-credit dissertation pulls the year average more than a 10-credit elective by a factor of six.
The canonical credit-weighted average formula:
- Credits = the credit value of each module (10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 60, or 120)
- Module Mark = the final mark for the module (percentage, 0 to 100)
- Sum = the total across every module taken in the year (typically 120 credits per year)
Year Weighting in 3-Year and 4-Year UK Degrees
UK universities almost universally discount Year 1 from the final degree classification (Year 1 still appears on the transcript and counts toward progression but does not contribute to the classification arithmetic). The remaining years are then weighted according to programme regulations. The four most common UK weighting models:
- 3-year undergraduate (standard 0 / 33 / 67): Year 1 weight 0 percent, Year 2 weight 33 percent, Year 3 weight 67 percent. The most common model at Russell Group universities for BA, BSc, BEng, and LLB programmes.
- 3-year undergraduate (40 / 60 split): Year 1 weight 0 percent, Year 2 weight 40 percent, Year 3 weight 60 percent. Used at some post-92 universities and a handful of Russell Group programmes for specific subjects.
- 4-year with placement year (0 / 20 / 40 / 40): Year 1 weight 0 percent, Year 2 weight 20 percent, Year 3 (placement year) typically counts at zero or pass-fail, Year 4 (final academic year) at 40 percent or higher. Variants exist where the placement year contributes 5 to 10 percent based on assessed work.
- 4-year integrated masters (MEng / MSci, 0 / 20 / 30 / 50): Year 1 weight 0 percent, Year 2 weight 20 percent, Year 3 weight 30 percent, Year 4 (masters year) weight 50 percent. The masters year is front-loaded because it carries the dissertation and the most advanced material.
The Year Weighting mode in the calculator above ships these four presets ready to use, plus a Custom mode for programmes with non-standard regulations. Always verify the weighting against your university handbook because borderline rules and dissertation handling differ across institutions.
Weighted Average Mark (WAM) and Dissertation Handling
Some UK universities (notably parts of the University of London, Imperial College, and several Australian sister institutions) use the term "Weighted Average Mark" (WAM) for the credit-weighted year or degree average computed by the formula above. WAM and "year average" mean the same thing arithmetically; the term simply distinguishes a credit-weighted average from a simple unweighted mean. Some programmes report WAM to two decimal places on transcripts.
Dissertation weighting deserves its own treatment. A typical undergraduate dissertation is 30 or 60 credits in the final year; a Master's dissertation is usually 60 credits. At 60 credits in a 120-credit year, the dissertation alone contributes 50 percent of the year average. Programmes vary on whether the dissertation mark can rescue a borderline classification (some apply a "dissertation rule" that lifts a 59 percent average to a 2:1 if the dissertation itself scored 60 percent or above). Check your programme regulations for the exact borderline treatment.
UK Grade Calculator Converters and Other Tools
The UK uni grade calculator above handles the standard credit-weighted average and year weighting. Three adjacent tools cover related workflows:
- Weighted grade calculator (also searched as "grade weight calculator", "calculator for weighted grades", "average calculator with weighting"): for category-weighted assessments WITHIN a single module (essays 30 percent, midterm 30 percent, exam 40 percent), use the weighted grade calculator first to compute the module mark, then drop that mark into the UK calculator above with the module's credit value. The two calculators are designed to chain together for the full UK module-mark workflow.
- Final grade calculator (also searched as "final grade calculator", "grade calc", "what grade do I need calculator"): the final grade calculator runs the inverse of the credit-weighted average: given your current year average and the credits remaining in your modules, it returns the average mark you need on the remaining work to hit a target classification. Useful at the UK midterm checkpoint when you have time to course-correct.
- UK to US 4.0 GPA conversion (for graduate-school applicants): for UK students applying to US graduate programmes, the standard GPA calculator on the 4.0 scale handles the US-format calculation. World Education Services (WES) is the canonical credential evaluator US graduate schools accept; expect a WES report to land within 0.1 to 0.2 GPA points of the rough mapping in the classification reference inside the calculator widget.
For US students arriving at this page by mistake (the calculator handles UK-style module credits, not US assignment points), the US grade calculator uses the standard US plus or minus letter scale where A starts at 93 percent. The two calculators target different academic systems and different grade-weighting conventions; switch to whichever matches the system your transcript reports.
Borderline Rules, Resit Caps, and Condonement at UK Universities
UK universities apply borderline classification rules to year averages within roughly 3 percentage points of a higher classification (a 67 to 69 percent year average sits at the borderline of a First; a 57 to 59 percent average sits at the borderline of a 2:1). The rule varies by institution and programme but typically considers the dissertation mark, the proportion of credits at the higher band, and overall academic profile. Some programmes round 69.5 up to 70 for a borderline First; others round only at the half-percent.
Resit caps apply when a student fails a module and re-sits it. Most UK universities cap the resit mark at 40 percent (the bare passing threshold), so a strong resit cannot lift the year average beyond what a borderline pass would deliver. Condonement allows a small number of failed credits (typically 20 to 40 credits per year) to count as passed when the surrounding modules carry the weighted average above the year pass threshold. Compensation works similarly but applies across the whole year rather than per-module. The exact rules for resit caps, condonement, and compensation are programme-specific and should be checked against your university handbook.
This UK grade calculator estimates year averages and final degree classifications using the standard credit-weighted average formula and the year-weighting models documented above. Universities apply institution-specific borderline rules, condonement, compensation, dissertation weighting, and rounding conventions; always verify against your programme regulations and your university registrar's office. For US graduate-school applications, see the GPA calculator for the 4.0 scale conversion and consult World Education Services (WES) for the canonical credential evaluation report.