Primary result
UF GPA
Calculated GPA
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Add courses to calculate GPA.
Academic planning
Estimate a University of Florida GPA with plus/minus grade mapping and credits.
Courses
Add rows for each class
Primary result
UF GPA
Calculated GPA
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Add courses to calculate GPA.
Quality points
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Credits counted
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Excluded credits
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Grade scale
UF 4.0
The University of Florida GPA calculator is about one thing: converting a transcript into a clear academic average that students can actually plan around. UF students often need a fast way to estimate how a new grade will affect their GPA, whether they are trying to keep scholarships, meet minimum progress thresholds, or simply understand where they stand after a difficult semester. GPA is a planning metric as much as it is a record metric, and the calculator makes that planning step much easier.
The niche vocabulary here is quality points, credit hours, plus/minus mapping, and excluded grades. The basic logic is simple but easy to get wrong by hand: multiply each course by its grade point value, sum the quality points, then divide by the total credits that count toward GPA.
| Grade | Points | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| A / A- | 4.00 / 3.67 | Highest standard range |
| B+ / B / B- | 3.33 / 3.00 / 2.67 | Mid-range performance |
| C+ / C / C- | 2.33 / 2.00 / 1.67 | Passing but pulling GPA down |
A student comparing two semesters can see whether a lighter load with stronger grades or a heavier load with a few lower marks is helping the average. Advisors use the same math to estimate whether the next semester needs to be more strategic. Parents use it to understand whether the transcript is moving in the right direction or slipping below a target.
The calculator also makes it obvious when a non-GPA grade should not be counted. That is important because excluded credits can make a raw transcript look busier than the GPA math actually is.
In plain English, UF GPA is the weighted average of your counted classes, not a simple grade count.
They are typically excluded from GPA, which is why the calculator shows excluded credits separately.
Those can be treated as zero-point or excluded depending on planning context; the calculator keeps them visible so you can decide.
Yes. A four-credit class affects GPA more than a one-credit class.
Yes. The calculator uses a plus/minus map so the estimate is more precise.