Skip to content

Last 60 Credits GPA Calculator: Junior-Senior GPA

Reproduce the last 60 credits GPA used by graduate, OMSAS, and law admissions before transcripts are sent. Every retake counts. Live, no sign-up.

Calculate your last 60 credits GPA on the 4.0 scale

Enter every graded course in chronological order, most recent first. The calculator walks rows until the credit ceiling is met.
Order Course Grade Credits Remove
4.0 scale grade reference
LetterGrade PointsPercentage (typical)
A+ / A4.093 to 100
A-3.790 to 92
B+3.387 to 89
B3.083 to 86
B-2.780 to 82
C+2.377 to 79
C2.073 to 76
C-1.770 to 72
D+ / D / D-1.3 / 1.0 / 0.760 to 69
F / WF / WU0.0Below 60
P / CR / S / W / Audit / Iexcludedexcluded

A+ caps at 4.0 on the standard 4.0 scale used by graduate and OMSAS admissions. LSAC uses a separate 4.33 scale.

What the Last 60 Credits GPA Calculator Does

The last 60 credits GPA calculator above reproduces the figure that graduate admissions readers, Ontario medical school committees (OMSAS), and selected master\'s programs request when they want to weigh recent performance more heavily than a cumulative recompute would allow. Enter each graded course from your last terms first, work backward through your transcript, and stop when the credit total reaches 60. The calculator handles the math, the boundary rule, and the special-status grade exclusions automatically.

Unlike the LSAC CAS GPA, the AMCAS recompute, or the CASPA recompute, the last 60 credits GPA does not have one central authority that publishes a single conversion table. Most US graduate programs apply the standard 4.0 scale with plus-and-minus increments. OUAC OMSAS uses the same scale for its Last 2 Years (L2) GPA but treats every credit equally regardless of credit hour weight at a few participating Ontario schools. This page applies the credit-weighted convention because it matches how the vast majority of programs read the figure. For the OMSAS L2 case, switch the mode selector to Last 2 years before entering rows.

How to calculate GPA of last 60 hours: the step-by-step method

To calculate GPA of last 60 hours by hand, list every graded course you completed and assign each one an enrollment-order rank where 1 is your most recent term. Sort the list by that rank, walk down the list, and accumulate credit hours until the running total reaches 60. For each course in that selection window, multiply the grade points (on the 4.0 scale) by the credit hours, sum the products, and divide by the total credit hours. The result is the last 60 hours GPA reported on the application. The calculator above runs that workflow live; the order column is what makes the boundary rule unambiguous when transcripts arrive out of strict chronological order, such as when summer-session credits cross calendar years.

How to calculate last 60 unit GPA on a quarter-system transcript

Quarter-system institutions issue credits at a 1.5x rate relative to semester systems, so a "60 units" target on a quarter-system school like UCLA or the University of Washington is not equivalent to a "60 credits" target at a semester school. If the graduate program you are applying to expects 60 semester credits, multiply each quarter-unit value by 2/3 (or 0.67) before entering it. If the program asks for "last 60 units" without further specification and your transcript is on the quarter system, enter the unit values exactly as printed; the boundary will land at roughly the last academic year and a half rather than two full years. Confirm with the program when the rule is ambiguous.

Calculate GPA Last 60 Hours: Selection Window Modes

The calculator above offers three selection windows. Each matches a real admissions workflow.

Last 60 credits gpa calculator: default mode for US graduate admissions

The default last 60 credits gpa calculator mode caps the window at 60 graded credit hours. This is the standard for US M.Ed, MSW, MPA, and many MS programs that request a junior-senior GPA on their application. The boundary course is included in full when its credits push the running total past 60. The result panel shows the window GPA, the implied cumulative GPA across every row you entered (whether or not it fell inside the window), and the credits counted.

Last 2 years mode for OMSAS Canadian medical school applications

Switch the mode selector to Last 2 years to apply the OMSAS L2 rule. Last 2 years counts every graded credit hour across the two most recent academic years with no 60-credit ceiling. OMSAS reports the L2 GPA on a 4.0 scale to McMaster, the University of Ottawa, Queen\'s University, the University of Toronto, Western University, and the Northern Ontario School of Medicine. McMaster computes its own weighted GPA on top of OUAC\'s figure; Western and U of T compute additional weighted variants. The BeMo OMSAS GPA Conversion calculator and the WALDEV LSAC tool offer single-mode versions of this calculation; this page combines both modes plus a custom-range mode in one place.

Custom credit range for non-standard windows

A small number of programs request a non-standard window: last 90 credits, last 45 credits, last 30 credits, or a fixed-window upper-division GPA on the major coursework only. Switch to Custom credit range and enter the ceiling. The calculator applies the same boundary-inclusion rule (the row that pushes past the ceiling enters in full) and produces the window GPA plus the implied cumulative for comparison. Confirm the program\'s specific instructions before relying on a custom-range figure for an application decision.

Last 60 Credits GPA Formula Reference

Last 60 Credits GPA Formula (4.0 scale)
Last 60 GPA = Σ (Grade Points × Credit Hours) Σ (Credit Hours in window)
Where:
  • Grade Points on the standard 4.0 scale: A+ = 4.0, A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, B- = 2.7, C+ = 2.3, C = 2.0, C- = 1.7, D+ = 1.3, D = 1.0, D- = 0.7, F = 0.0
  • Credit Hours in window = credit hours from every row that enters the selection window (last 60 credits by default, last 2 years for OMSAS, or a custom ceiling)
  • Boundary rule: the row whose credits push the running total past the ceiling enters in full. Schools do not split a single course across two GPA buckets.
  • WF / WU punitive withdrawals count as 0.0 with their credit hours. Plain W, Audit, Incomplete, and Pass / Credit / Satisfactory grades are excluded from both sides of the formula.
Example: Five courses inside the window: A at 3 credits = 12.0 quality points, B+ at 4 credits = 13.2, A- at 3 credits = 11.1, B at 3 credits = 9.0, A at 4 credits = 16.0. Total = 61.3 over 17 credits. Last 60 GPA = 61.3 / 17 = 3.61.

GPA Calculator Last 60 Credits: How the Result Reads

A GPA calculator last 60 credits output is a single decimal number on the 4.0 scale, typically reported to two decimal places. The figure pairs with the cumulative GPA on most graduate applications: programs see both numbers and read them together. The recent-trend SVG above visualizes that pairing. When the window GPA is materially higher than the implied cumulative, the visual delta makes the upward trend immediately legible to anyone reading the screenshot, which is useful when applicants paste the result into pre-application advising threads. When the figures are essentially identical, the same visualization confirms academic consistency.

Last 60 hours gpa calculator output: admissions bands

The interpretation label under the result panel maps the window GPA to a typical admissions band. The bands are aligned to common minimums published across M.Ed, MSW, MPA, MS, and MBA pathways. A last 60 hours figure of 3.65 or higher lands competitively at selective programs. The 3.40 to 3.64 range reads as strong at most master\'s programs. The 3.10 to 3.39 range meets typical 3.0 minimums and reads as in-range for the median master\'s applicant. Anything below 2.85 is borderline; programs at that level typically expect strong GRE, GMAT, or specialty test scores to compensate, plus a personal statement that addresses the figure directly. These bands describe the typical M.Ed / MSW / MPA / generic-MS pool. Selective MS programs in computer science or engineering, MBA programs at top-25 schools, and competitive professional pathways set their own higher thresholds.

Programs That Use the Last 60 Credits or Junior-Senior GPA

The table below shows which graduate admissions services request a last 60 credits (or equivalent) figure and how each treats the underlying calculation. Confirm with each individual program before relying on the figure: a small number of programs within each pathway compute their own institutional variants on top of the published figure.

Graduate, law, and medical admissions: how each service handles upper-division GPA
Admissions pathway Upper-division GPA used? Window Scale Notes
Master of Education (M.Ed.) Yes, frequently requested Last 60 credits 4.0 Many state programs require 2.75 minimum on the last 60 credits even when cumulative is lower
Master of Social Work (MSW) Yes, weighted heavily Last 60 credits 4.0 Several CSWE-accredited programs report a separate last-60 figure to faculty review
Master of Public Administration (MPA) Sometimes separately requested Last 60 credits 4.0 NASPAA-accredited programs vary; many use last-60 to evaluate non-traditional applicants
OMSAS Canadian medical (Ontario) Yes, as L2 GPA Last 2 years 4.0 (OMSAS scale) McMaster, Western, and U of T apply additional weighted variants on top of L2
LSAC law school No, cumulative only All undergraduate courses 4.33 LSAC counts every attempt; no upper-division option
AMCAS US allopathic medical No, cumulative only All undergraduate courses 4.0 BCPM (science) and AO (all other) GPAs replace the upper-division concept
CASPA physician assistant No, cumulative + science + last 60 reported Cumulative; last 60 displayed 4.0 CASPA shows a separate last 60 credits GPA on the verified report for program reference
MBA (top 25) Cumulative weighed heaviest; junior-senior often noted Cumulative 4.0 GMAT / GRE more important; recent academic improvement noted in personal statement

How LSAC, AMCAS, and OMSAS Calculations Compare

The last 60 credits GPA is one of several recomputed figures graduate-school applicants encounter. The differences across the major centralized services matter when the same applicant is targeting multiple pathways. The table below compares the LSAC, AMCAS, and OMSAS recomputes against the standard last 60 credits approach.

Methodology differences: last 60 credits versus LSAC versus AMCAS versus OMSAS
Methodology rule Last 60 credits LSAC (law) AMCAS (US med) OMSAS L2 (Ontario med)
A+ value 4.0 4.33 4.0 4.0
Retakes counted Every attempt typical Every attempt Every attempt Every attempt
Selection window Last 60 graded credits All undergraduate All undergraduate Last 2 academic years
Punitive W (WF, WU) 0.0 with credits 0.0 with credits 0.0 with credits 0.0 with credits
Pass / Credit / Satisfactory Excluded Excluded Excluded Excluded
Quarter-credit conversion Multiply by 2/3 for semester equiv Multiply by 2/3 (LSAC handles) Multiply by 2/3 (AMCAS handles) Reported in OUAC native units
Boundary rule Boundary course in full N/A (no window) N/A (no window) Defined by academic year
Pre-baccalaureate post-bacc Counts if inside window Counts on separate line Counts on separate line Excluded from L2

Last 60 Units GPA Calculator: Tips for Accurate Entry

  • Pull every transcript first. Missing a single community college dual-enrollment transcript can shift the window by one or two courses, which can change the last 60 credits figure by 0.05 GPA points or more.
  • Walk backward from your most recent term. Enter the most recent course on row 1 with order value 1. Increment the order value as you walk older. Toggle Sort recent-first if you accidentally enter rows out of chronological order.
  • Include every retake attempt. Most graduate admissions count every attempt. Enter both the original and the retake as separate rows; drop the original to see the lenient version your transcript reports.
  • Mark withdrawals correctly. A plain W is excluded; WF and WU count as 0.0 with full credit weight. Selecting the wrong dropdown entry can shift the figure by 0.1 GPA points or more on a tight window.
  • Use the Last 2 years mode for OMSAS. OMSAS L2 ignores the 60-credit cap and counts every graded credit across two full academic years. The mode selector handles the math; do not try to approximate L2 by entering 60 credits and stopping.
  • Convert quarter credits before entry. Quarter-system schools (UC system except Berkeley and Merced, Stanford, University of Washington, Dartmouth, Northwestern) issue credits at a 1.5x rate. Multiply by 2/3 to get the semester-credit equivalent before entering.
  • Verify against the official transcript. Your registrar\'s upper-division GPA, if printed, is the authoritative figure. The calculator above reproduces the standard credit-weighted methodology; a small number of institutions apply non-standard rules that the calculator cannot replicate.

Sources and Methodology

The calculator above implements the standard credit-weighted methodology shared by graduate admissions services, OUAC OMSAS, and the LSAC / AMCAS / CASPA recomputes (with the LSAC 4.33 cap intentionally omitted because graduate and OMSAS readers use the standard 4.0 scale). Primary source documentation:

  • LSAC Transcript Summarization (lsac.org) publishes the canonical credit-weighted GPA conversion table, repeat-course handling rules, and pass/fail exclusion that most other services mirror.
  • OUAC OMSAS Handbook (ouac.on.ca) documents the Last 2 Years (L2) GPA calculation used by every Ontario medical school and the conversion scale OUAC applies to non-Ontario transcripts.
  • AAMC AMCAS Grade Conversion Guide (aamc.org) provides the cumulative-recompute methodology that informs how US medical schools treat upper-division coursework.
  • BeMo OMSAS GPA Conversion Calculator documents the OMSAS scale conversion for percentage-graded transcripts converting into the 4.0 OMSAS scale.
  • Scholaro Grade Conversion Database covers international credential conversions for applicants whose recent coursework was completed outside North America.

For the standard credit-weighted GPA workflow that underlies every variant on this page, see our GPA calculator and cumulative GPA calculator. Law applicants should run the LSAC GPA calculator for the 4.33-scale recompute; US medical applicants should run the AMCAS GPA calculator for the BCPM and AO breakdown; physician assistant applicants should run the CASPA GPA calculator for the verified-report figures. Last verified: 2026-05-26.

How do I calculate my last 60 credits GPA?
List every graded undergraduate course you completed, starting with the most recent term and walking backward in time. Convert each letter grade to grade points on the 4.0 scale (A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, and so on). Multiply each course's grade points by its credit hours, sum the products, and divide by the total credit hours included. Stop walking backward once your credit total reaches 60. The result is your last 60 credits GPA. The calculator above runs that math live as you enter rows; toggle Sort recent-first if your courses are not already in chronological order.
How to calculate GPA of last 60 credits when one course pushes past the 60-credit line?
Standard practice across graduate, law, and Canadian medical school admissions is to include the boundary course in full. If you have already counted 57 credit hours and the next chronologically older course is a 4-credit class, all 4 credits enter the calculation, putting the total at 61. Schools do not split a single course across two GPA buckets, so the calculator above mirrors that rule. Verify with each program if you are within a few credits of an admissions cutoff: a small number of programs prefer the credit count to land at exactly 60 by dropping the boundary course instead.
Which graduate admissions actually use the last 60 credits GPA?
Master of Education (M.Ed.), Master of Social Work (MSW), and Master of Public Administration (MPA) programs frequently request a junior-senior GPA on the application form. The Ontario Universities Application Centre (OUAC) collects a Last 2 Years GPA for OMSAS Canadian medical school applications; McMaster, Western, and the University of Toronto compute their own weighted variants on top of it. A subset of Master of Science programs and some MBA programs accept an upper-division GPA in addition to the cumulative figure. Law schools through LSAC and US medical schools through AMCAS do not use a last 60 credits approach; both recompute every undergraduate grade.
How is the last 60 credits GPA different from the LSAC, AMCAS, and CASPA recomputes?
LSAC, AMCAS, and CASPA all recompute a single cumulative undergraduate GPA across every graded course you ever took. None of the three offers a last 60 credits option. LSAC uses a 4.33 scale (A+ = 4.33); AMCAS and CASPA cap A+ at 4.0. Every attempt of a repeated course counts in all three services. The last 60 credits approach is a separate, less centralized request used by graduate schools, OMSAS in Canada, and a minority of professional programs that want to weigh recent performance more heavily than a cumulative recompute would allow.
Do retakes count in the last 60 credits GPA calculation?
Most graduate admissions follow the LSAC rule and count every attempt of a repeated course, including the original failing or low grade. The retake itself enters the window if it falls within the last 60 credit hours; the original attempt enters only if it also falls inside the window. If your school honors grade replacement on the official transcript, the admissions committee may or may not honor it for the upper-division calculation. The calculator above counts every row you enter, so include both attempts as separate rows to reproduce the strictest version of the calculation. Drop the original row to see the lenient version your school transcript shows.
How do withdrawals, incompletes, and pass/fail courses affect the last 60 credits GPA?
Non-punitive withdrawals (a plain W on the transcript), Incomplete grades, Audit courses, and Pass / Credit / Satisfactory grades are excluded from both sides of the calculation. They do not add credits to the denominator. Punitive withdrawals (WF, WU, WNP) count as failures at 0.0 grade points with their full credit-hour weight, which pulls the GPA down. The calculator above provides dedicated dropdown entries for each special-status grade so you can mark rows correctly. Pay particular attention to WF entries: they are the single most common cause of an upper-division GPA running lower than expected.
My last 60 credits GPA is much higher than my cumulative GPA. Can I emphasize the recent figure?
Yes. A strong upward trend is one of the most compelling narratives an applicant can present, and graduate admissions readers explicitly look for it. Report both figures wherever the application provides separate fields. Address the cumulative-versus-recent gap directly in your personal statement: identify the catalyst (a major change, a difficult first-year transition, a health or family issue resolved), name the academic recovery, and point to the upper-division grades as evidence of readiness for graduate study. The calculator above shows both numbers in the same panel so you can confirm the delta before drafting that paragraph.