Calculate your major GPA
| Course | Credits | Grade | In Major | Remove |
|---|
Letter grade reference (4.0 scale)
| Letter | Points | Range |
|---|---|---|
| A+ | 4.0* | 97-100% |
| A | 4.0 | 93-96% |
| A- | 3.7 | 90-92% |
| B+ | 3.3 | 87-89% |
| B | 3.0 | 83-86% |
| B- | 2.7 | 80-82% |
| C+ | 2.3 | 77-79% |
| C | 2.0 | 73-76% |
| C- | 1.7 | 70-72% |
| D+ | 1.3 | 67-69% |
| D | 1.0 | 63-66% |
| D- | 0.7 | 60-62% |
| F | 0.0 | Below 60% |
* A+ GPA = 4.0 at most US colleges; a minority award 4.3.
How to Calculate Major GPA on the 4.0 Scale
A major GPA calculator works the same way the standard 4.0 calculator does. The only difference is the course list. You include every course your academic department counts toward the major (the ones that appear under the major section of your degree audit) and exclude everything else: general education, free electives, courses outside the department unless the audit lists them.
Major GPA matters separately from overall GPA in three contexts. Graduate school applications routinely ask for both. Honors-in-the-major designations require a specific in-major threshold (often 3.5 or higher). Some scholarships, especially departmental awards, are scored on major GPA alone. A student with a 3.4 overall and a 3.8 chemistry major GPA reads as focused and department-strong on a chemistry PhD application. A 3.7 overall with a 3.3 in the major reads differently. Both profiles fit somewhere; the key is knowing what each number signals.
How to find major GPA when your school has a degree audit
Most US universities print the major GPA on the degree audit (sometimes called the academic evaluation, program evaluation, or graduation check). Look for a summary row at the top or bottom of the major section showing major credits attempted, major credits earned, and major GPA. Banner, PeopleSoft, MyUF, Workday Student, and Stellic all surface this number on the same screen as the overall GPA. If the audit does not display it, your academic advisor or the registrar will produce a major-only calculation on request.
How to figure out major GPA from the catalog when no audit exists
Pull your academic catalog's major requirements page. It lists every required course and elective the department counts. Cross-reference each course against your unofficial transcript and enter only the matches into the calculator above. Flag them as Major using the In Major toggle. The calculator returns both your in-major figure and your overall GPA in one pass so you can see both numbers from a single input table.
Major GPA Calculation, Step by Step
The major GPA calculation has four steps. Identify the major courses on the audit. Convert each letter grade to its 4.0 scale value. Multiply each grade point by the course's credit hours to produce quality points. Sum the quality points across all major courses and divide by total major credits. The score GPA you get is the credit-weighted average a registrar uses when reporting major GPA to graduate admissions committees and honors programs.
- Grade Points = 4.0 scale value of each letter grade (A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, ..., D = 1.0, F = 0.0)
- Credits = credit hours for the course as listed on the transcript
- Σ = sum across only the courses the department counts toward the major
- Excluded: general education, free electives, audited courses, pass/fail courses, withdrawals
Calculate major GPA when credits vary across the major
Major GPA is credit-weighted, not a flat average of grades. A 4-credit organic chemistry A moves the major GPA twice as much as a 2-credit lab A because 4 multiplied by 4.0 produces 16 quality points versus 2 multiplied by 4.0 producing 8. Departments that require lab-heavy courses or research credits often see a larger spread between overall GPA and major GPA than programs with uniform 3-credit courses. One hard-earned A in a 5-credit engineering capstone lifts the major GPA more than three As in 1-credit seminars.
How do you calculate major GPA when a course was repeated?
Apply your school's grade replacement policy. Most US universities replace the first attempt's grade with the retake for GPA calculation; the original stays on the transcript but does not count. Some schools (older UC policies, several SUNY campuses) average the two attempts. A few count both grades in full. Whichever rule applies, enter only the counted attempt in the calculator above. Verify with your registrar before relying on a calculated figure for a scholarship or transfer application: the wrong rule produces a major GPA that will not match the official transcript.
Major GPA vs Overall GPA: What Each Number Tells You
Major GPA meaning is narrow by design: only the courses the department counts toward the major. Overall GPA uses every graded course on the transcript. The two numbers can diverge by a full point on a real student record. Comparing them is a standard part of graduate admissions review at competitive programs, especially in chemistry, biology, engineering, and economics where the major coursework is the most direct signal of department-level preparation.
The gpa major means depends on context. On a resume, "GPA: 3.8 (major: chemistry)" means the in-department figure. On a graduate school application, the major GPA field is usually a separate line from the cumulative GPA, both reported on the 4.0 scale. On honors-in-the-major paperwork, the department uses its own definition of "major" (which may include or exclude required cognate courses outside the department). When in doubt, attach a one-line note clarifying which courses you included.
Overall GPA vs major GPA on graduate school applications
Admissions committees read the spread carefully. A 3.4 overall with a 3.8 major GPA in physics suggests a student who crushed major coursework but had a rough start in general education or struggled with humanities requirements: a strong signal for a physics PhD program. A 3.7 overall with a 3.3 in the major reads as a generalist who did not specialize, which works against an application to a specialized program but works for an interdisciplinary one. The same student profile can be a strength or a weakness depending on the program's target.
Major GPA on scholarship applications
Departmental scholarships almost always want the strict major-only figure: only the courses the department applies to the major. University-wide scholarships and general merit awards sometimes accept either the major-only number or a broader "GPA in the major plus cognate department courses" definition. Read the scholarship instructions carefully. When the instructions are ambiguous, include the strict figure plus a one-line note listing the courses you counted. Adding the list takes 30 seconds and prevents the awarding committee from having to guess what your number represents.
Why graduate admissions reads the spread
A growing share of PhD and professional school applications ask for the major GPA on a separate line precisely because the spread carries information the cumulative GPA hides. Two students with identical 3.5 overall GPAs can have major GPAs of 3.9 and 3.1, respectively. In a department like pure mathematics or theoretical physics, the 3.9 major GPA is the deciding figure. In a more breadth-oriented program (some MPP programs, certain interdisciplinary humanities PhDs), the cumulative GPA still leads. Run the calculator above twice if a program asks for both; the In Major toggle lets you do it from a single course list in one pass.
How Schools Calculate Major GPA: Institutional Variation
Schools agree on the formula but diverge on which courses count. UC Berkeley counts every course required for the major plus a specified number of upper-division electives in the department, and reports the figure on the degree audit. Penn State publishes a Major GPA Calculator template in each department handbook with a list of the exact courses to include. Texas A&M and UC San Diego both let advisors override the audit's default major-course set when a student switches majors mid-degree. Cal Poly San Luis Obispo treats minor requirements separately from major courses and computes both.
Three patterns recur across US institutions:
- Department-only definition: Only courses with the major prefix count. Free electives outside the department do not, even if the student "used" them to satisfy a graduation requirement. This is the strict and most common definition.
- Audit-section definition: Whatever the degree audit lists under the major section counts. Cognate courses required by the major (often a math sequence for an engineering major, statistics for a psychology major) are included.
- Faculty-discretion definition: The department chair or honors committee decides on a case-by-case basis, especially for honors-in-the-major reviews. Less common but still present at smaller liberal arts colleges.
Always verify with your specific department which definition produces the number on your official record. The calculator above accepts whichever course list you flag as Major; the math is identical across definitions.
Core GPA, NCAA Eligibility, and Where It Differs From Major GPA
Core GPA shows up in two contexts in higher education. In NCAA athletic eligibility, core GPA means the GPA computed only from the 16 NCAA-approved high school core courses (English, math, natural and physical science, social studies, additional academic areas). The NCAA Eligibility Center uses core GPA, not the high school overall GPA, to determine Division I and Division II athletic eligibility on a sliding scale against the SAT or ACT score. A 3.0 NCAA core GPA pairs with a 620 SAT or 52 sum ACT for Division I; lower core GPAs require higher test scores.
In undergraduate degree planning, "core" sometimes refers to the core required major courses (as opposed to major electives). The calculator above handles either definition. If you are calculating an NCAA core GPA, pull your high school's NCAA-approved course list from your counselor, flag the 16 core courses as Major in the calculator, and read the result. The straight 4.0 scale figure is what you enter on the NCAA Eligibility Center portal; the NCAA does its own sliding scale comparison from there.
Score GPA Tracking: Major GPA Across Semesters
Score GPA tracking for a single major across multiple semesters is the most common use of this calculator outside of one-shot application prep. Students hit a low major GPA in sophomore year, get put on departmental probation, and need to model how many major credits at what grade level it takes to reach the 3.0 floor. Run the calculator after each semester. Add the new term's major courses, watch the major GPA shift, and use the result to plan the next term's course load.
- Match the audit exactly. The calculator is only as accurate as the course list you flag. Pull the major-applied course list from the degree audit itself, not from memory. Audit-flagged courses are the ones the registrar will use when computing the official major GPA at graduation.
- Note department-specific rules. Some departments require a C or better in every major course for the grade to count toward the major. Engineering programs frequently require a C+ or B-. Nursing programs sometimes set the floor at B. Check the handbook and exclude rows where the grade falls below the department's minimum-acceptable threshold.
- Track the spread. A spread of 0.4 or more between major and overall GPA is a signal worth interpreting. If the major GPA is the higher figure, lean on it in applications; if it is the lower figure, plan the next semester's major courses carefully.
- Verify with the registrar before using a calculated major GPA in any official context: scholarship, graduate school, honors program, transfer application.
Calculate major GPA online before degree audit refreshes
Degree audits at most US universities update overnight after grades post, but some schools (especially older Banner installations) take 3 to 5 business days. If you need the major GPA figure before the audit catches up (for a scholarship deadline, an honors program application, an early graduate school submission), reproduce the math with the calculator above. Pull the course list from the audit, enter each course with the grade just posted on the unofficial transcript, flag the major rows, and read the result. The figure matches what the registrar will produce once the audit refreshes.
Sources: US Department of Education IPEDS Glossary definitions of cumulative and major GPA; NCAA Eligibility Center for core GPA and the Division I and II sliding scales; AACRAO registrar standards for transfer credit and grade replacement policy; UC Berkeley Office of the Registrar for the major GPA definition under the College of Letters and Science; College Board for grading trend data. Always verify with your specific school's registrar before applying a calculated major GPA to an official context.
Related GPA calculators: use the GPA calculator for a clean 4.0 scale calculation across any course set, the cumulative GPA calculator for combining semester GPAs across your full record, the college GPA calculator for university students tracking semester and cumulative figures, and the science GPA calculator for AMCAS and CASPA applicants who need the strict BCPM science GPA on top of major GPA.