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GPA to Percentage Converter

Convert any GPA value to its equivalent percentage range on the standard 4.0 scale used by most U.S. middle schools.

GPA PointsLetter GradePercentage RangeMidpointCategory
4.0A / A+93–100%97%Excellent
3.7A-90–92%91%Excellent
3.3B+87–89%88%Good
3.0B83–86%85%Good
2.7B-80–82%81%Good
2.3C+77–79%78%Satisfactory
2.0C73–76%75%Satisfactory
1.7C-70–72%71%Satisfactory
1.3D+67–69%68%Passing
1.0D60–66%63%Passing
0.0F0–59%<60%Failing

Important note: GPA to percentage conversion is approximate. Different schools use different percentage cutoffs for letter grades. Some schools set an A at 90–100%, others at 93–100%. Always check your school's specific grading policy. The ranges above reflect the most common U.S. middle school convention.

Why GPA and Percentage Don't Convert Exactly

GPA and percentage scores measure the same academic performance through different lenses, and they don't map to each other perfectly — for a few important reasons:

GPA compresses the top of the scale
Both 93% and 99% on a test translate to a 4.0 GPA. A student who averages 99% on every assignment has the same GPA as someone who averages 93%. Percentage distinguishes them; GPA does not.
Letter grade cutoffs vary by school
At School A, a 90% might be an A-. At School B, a 90% is only a B+. Same percentage, different GPA. Our table uses the most common U.S. convention (A = 93–100%, A- = 90–92%), but confirm your school's specific cutoffs.
GPA is categorical, not continuous
Percentage is a continuous scale (87.4% is different from 87.5%). GPA is categorical — both 87% and 89% map to the same B+ (3.3). This rounding means that two students with different percentage averages can have identical GPAs.
Different rounding methods
Some schools round percentage averages before converting to a letter grade. Others convert each individual assignment grade to a letter grade and then average the letter grades. These methods can produce different GPA results from the same raw percentages.

Common School Grading Scale Variations

There are three main grading scale conventions used by U.S. middle schools. Find out which one your school uses:

Letter GradeMost CommonSome SchoolsStrict Schools
A93–100%90–100%95–100%
A-90–92%92–94%
B+87–89%87–89%88–91%
B83–86%80–86%83–87%
C73–76%70–79%73–82%
D60–66%60–69%60–72%

Our calculator uses the "Most Common" scale by default. If your school uses a different scale, check your student handbook or ask your guidance counselor.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a 3.0 GPA the same as 80%?

Approximately — a 3.0 GPA corresponds to a B average, which is typically 83–86% on the most common U.S. grading scale. However, if your school uses a 10-point scale where 80% is a B, then 3.0 GPA corresponds to 80%. It depends on your school's specific grade cutoffs.

What percentage is a 3.5 GPA?

A 3.5 GPA falls between a B+ (3.3 = 87–89%) and an A- (3.7 = 90–92%). In practice, a 3.5 GPA typically corresponds to a percentage average in the 88–90% range, though the exact conversion depends on your school's grading scale.

What percentage is a 4.0 GPA?

A 4.0 GPA corresponds to an A or A+, which is 93–100% on the most common U.S. grading scale. Some schools set the A range at 90–100%, in which case a 4.0 can mean any percentage from 90 to 100.

Can I have a high percentage but a lower GPA?

Yes — this can happen if a class uses a percentage-to-letter conversion that rounds down. For example, if a 92.4% rounds to 92%, which is an A- (3.7) rather than an A (4.0), your GPA points would be 3.7 despite being only 0.6% below an A.