Calculate your middle school GPA
| Class | Grade | Level | Remove |
|---|
Letter Grade to 4.0 Scale Reference
| Letter | Percentage | 4.0 Scale |
|---|---|---|
| A+ / A | 93 to 100 | 4.0* |
| A- | 90 to 92 | 3.7 |
| B+ | 87 to 89 | 3.3 |
| B | 83 to 86 | 3.0 |
| B- | 80 to 82 | 2.7 |
| C+ | 77 to 79 | 2.3 |
| C | 73 to 76 | 2.0 |
| C- | 70 to 72 | 1.7 |
| D+ | 67 to 69 | 1.3 |
| D | 63 to 66 | 1.0 |
| D- | 60 to 62 | 0.7 |
| F | Below 60 | 0.0 |
* A+ scores 4.0 at most US schools; a small minority award 4.3 at the middle school level.
How the Middle Schools GPA Calculator Works on the 4.0 Scale
This middle schools GPA calculator runs the same arithmetic the registrar runs at virtually every US middle school. It converts each letter grade to a 4.0-scale point value, averages across the classes you enter, and shows the running GPA live. Two conventions matter for middle schoolers: there is almost never an honors or AP weight to apply, and there is almost never a credit-hour value to enter. Both defaults are baked in. Pick a letter grade per row and the calculator does the rest.
Middle school GPA matters most for one downstream decision: high school course placement. A 6th, 7th, or 8th grader with a strong cumulative GPA typically qualifies for accelerated math, honors English, and early foreign language tracks in 9th grade. Counselors review the middle school transcript when they build the freshman schedule, even though the GPA itself never appears on a college application later.
How to calculate GPA middle school step by step
- List every class on your most recent report card (or every class for the year if you want a cumulative GPA).
- Pick the letter grade you earned in each class from the dropdown.
- Leave Class Level on Standard unless a class is accelerated or carries high school credit.
- Read the GPA below the table. It updates the moment you fill enough rows.
- Optional: add or remove rows for a different term, or hit Reset to start over.
GPA Calculator Jr High and Junior High: Same Math, Different Name
A GPA calculator jr high and a GPA calculator for junior high run the exact same calculation as a middle school GPA calculator. Jr high (or junior high) is the older name for the same grade-level bracket, used by districts that combine grades 7 to 9 (some extend to 10). The math is identical: list classes, pick letter grades, average the 4.0-scale values. The only wrinkle is that a small number of junior high programs offer 9th-grade-level honors or HS-credit classes; flip those rows to Advanced and the tool adds a +0.5 bump to each grade point.
GPA calculator junior high differences
If your junior high program crosses into 9th grade and offers honors or AP coursework, switch to the high school GPA calculator instead. That version supports the full +0.5 Honors and +1.0 AP / IB bump system that high school transcripts use. The middle school tool above keeps the interface simpler because the bumps are the exception rather than the rule at this level.
Jr high GPA calculator defaults
A jr high GPA calculator should default to no weighting and equal class weight, and the calculator above does both. If your district assigns credit hours for scheduling purposes (some K-8 programs do), the math still works out: equal class weight equals equal credit weight whenever every class carries the same credit value. The output label stays the same either way.
Middle School GPA Calculator No Credits: Why It Is the Default
The middle school GPA calculator no credits mode applies to nearly every US middle school. Credit hours are a high school and college accounting convention; middle schools track classes, not credits. The calculator above treats every class as equal weight, which produces the same result as a credits-based formula whenever each class carries the same credit value. A student with six classes earning A, A-, B+, B, A, A- has a GPA of (4.0 + 3.7 + 3.3 + 3.0 + 4.0 + 3.7) / 6 = 3.62 regardless of whether you label each class 1 credit or skip credits entirely.
Middle school GPA calculator no credits with percentages
Schools that report percentages instead of letter grades can still use the middle school GPA calculator no credits workflow. Convert each percentage to a letter using the reference table above the calculator (93 and above is A, 90 to 92 is A-, 87 to 89 is B+, and so on), then pick that letter. Or use the percentage to letter grade converter to translate every percentage first and enter the letters here.
Middle School GPA Calculator Formula and 4.0 Scale Math
- Grade Points = 4.0-scale value of the letter grade (A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0, D = 1.0, F = 0.0)
- Number of Classes = total classes on the report card for the term (or year, for cumulative GPA)
GPA calculator 4.0 scale middle school point values
The GPA calculator 4.0 scale middle school point values are identical to the high school and college scale. A or A+ is 4.0, A- is 3.7, B+ is 3.3, B is 3.0, B- is 2.7, C+ is 2.3, C is 2.0, C- is 1.7, D+ is 1.3, D is 1.0, D- is 0.7, and F is 0.0. Some middle schools simplify by dropping the plus and minus modifiers, which gives a cleaner A = 4, B = 3, C = 2, D = 1, F = 0 grid. The reference table inside the calculator above shows the full scale.
Average GPA for Middle Schoolers and Honor Roll Cutoffs
The average GPA for middle schoolers nationwide sits between 3.0 and 3.5, with most published district reports showing a mean GPA near 3.3. A 6th, 7th, or 8th grader earning mostly Bs with a few As lands on the average. Honor Roll cutoffs are remarkably consistent across districts: 3.5 for standard Honor Roll, 3.8 for Principal's List or High Honor Roll, and 4.0 for Distinguished or Headmaster's List where that tier exists. A GPA below 2.0 typically triggers an academic concern letter and a parent conference at most US middle schools.
What is a good GPA in middle school 8th grade?
A good GPA in middle school 8th grade is anything at or above 3.5 on the standard 4.0 scale. That puts a student in the Honor Roll range and signals readiness for accelerated 9th grade courses (honors English, geometry or higher, second-year foreign language). A 3.8 or higher opens access to the most rigorous freshman tracks at most high schools. A 3.0 to 3.4 GPA is solidly average and still meets the placement bar for standard college-prep courses in 9th grade.
Does middle school GPA matter for college?
Middle school GPA does not appear on a college application. Colleges receive only the high school transcript starting with 9th grade coursework. Middle school GPA does matter for two near-term decisions: 9th grade course placement (counselors review middle school grades when they build the freshman schedule) and high school credit retention, where a class taken in 8th grade earns high school credit and the grade does travel forward onto the high school transcript. Algebra I in 8th grade is the most common example. Source: National Center for Education Statistics high school course-taking patterns.
GPA Middle School Calculator: Weighted Versus Unweighted
The GPA middle school calculator above runs unweighted by default because nearly every US middle school reports unweighted GPA. Weighted GPA is the high school convention. A small subset of districts (more common in the southern and southwestern US) award a +0.5 grade-point bump for accelerated middle school courses that carry high school credit, like Algebra I, Geometry, Spanish I, or French I taken in 7th or 8th grade. The calculator above handles that case: flip the Class Level dropdown to Advanced / HS credit on any qualifying row and the bump applies.
Weighted middle school GPA edge cases
A weighted middle school GPA only makes sense if your district explicitly awards a bump on the report card. If the school transcript shows the same grade point value for every class regardless of accelerated status, the calculator should stay on the Standard default for every row. The +0.5 bump on this tool matches the most common district policy when bumps do apply. Always verify with your specific school's registrar before treating any bumped GPA as official.
Cumulative Middle School GPA Versus Quarter or Semester GPA
A cumulative middle school GPA averages every class from every term in middle school into one number. A quarter or semester GPA averages only the classes from that one term. Most middle schools publish both: the quarter GPA on the report card and the cumulative GPA on the end-of-year academic record. To calculate cumulative middle school GPA in the tool above, enter every class from every quarter across 6th, 7th, and 8th grade into the same table. For a quarter GPA, enter only that quarter's classes and read the result, then hit Reset before the next term.
How to calculate 8th grade GPA across all four quarters
To calculate 8th grade GPA across all four quarters, enter every class from Q1, Q2, Q3, and Q4 into the calculator with the letter grade earned at the end of each quarter. The math is the same equal-weight average across all entries. If a class appears in all four quarters (most do), that class shows up four times in the table, once per quarter. A class that only runs one semester appears twice. The cumulative GPA the calculator outputs matches what the registrar reports on the end-of-year transcript.
Practical Tips for Middle School Students Tracking GPA
- Run the calculator at every report card. Waiting until the end of 8th grade to look at the running average is too late for 9th grade placement decisions; counselors finalize freshman schedules in early spring of 8th grade.
- Treat electives the same as core classes. PE, Art, Music, and Technology grades count equally toward middle school GPA at most US schools. A C in PE pulls the average down the same as a C in math.
- Ask before assuming a class is advanced. A few middle schools offer 9th-grade-level Algebra I, Geometry, or foreign language with a real +0.5 bump and HS credit; many label classes "accelerated" without awarding any grade-point bump. Check the student handbook or ask the counselor before flipping a row to Advanced.
- One bad grade does not define three years. A B in 6th grade barely moves the cumulative average across three years of middle school. Consistency matters more than any single class.
- Verify the official GPA with the school registrar before relying on the calculator number for Honor Roll, scholarship, or placement decisions. District policies vary on plus and minus weighting and on accelerated-class bumps.
The middle school GPA calculator above handles the most common US conventions. For a 9th grade transition, switch to the high school GPA calculator with its full Honors and AP weighting. For a single-class average from assignment scores, use the grade calculator. For the general 4.0 scale tool with every grade tier, use the GPA calculator. National middle school grading conventions and course-taking data come from the US Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics; district-level policy varies. The 8th grade Algebra I high school credit pattern is documented in NCES Statistics in Brief 2018-118 on high school credits from middle school. College Board summarizes the standard 4.0 scale the calculator uses. Always verify with your specific school's registrar.