Marks to GPA Calculator Nepal 2083 — Free Online Converter

Enter your subjects, credit hours, and letter grades to calculate your GPA on the 4.0 scale. Add subjects as needed to match your transcript.

Add Subject Rows

Enter each subject, then add marks or grades with credits

Subject Credits Grade Points

📘 Sources & Methodology

  • Standard 4.0 GPA Scale

Rules last reviewed: June 2026. For official use, follow your institution transcript/policy.

Grading Scale

Grade Marks % Point Meaning
A+ 90–100 4 Outstanding
A 80–89 3.6 Excellent
B+ 70–79 3.2 Very Good
B 60–69 2.8 Good
C+ 50–59 2.4 Satisfactory
C 40–49 2 Acceptable
D 35–39 1.6 Basic
NG 0–34 0 Not Graded

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate GPA from grades?
Choose the letter grade for each subject, enter its credit hours, then calculate the weighted average: GPA = Σ(Grade Point × Credits) ÷ Σ(Credits).
Can I add more subjects?
Yes. Use "+ Add Another Subject" to include all the subjects from your transcript.

Who Should Use Marks to GPA Conversion?

How to Convert Marks to GPA

  1. Enter each subject and credit hours.
  2. Select the matching grade band for each subject mark.
  3. Apply weighted formula across all subjects.
  4. Review GPA and conversion context before submission.
GPA = Σ(Grade Point × Credits) ÷ Σ(Credits)

Worked Example

Suppose you have four subjects (credits 3, 3, 4, 2) with grade points 3.3, 3.0, 3.7, and 2.7. Quality points become 9.9, 9.0, 14.8, and 5.4. Total = 39.1 over 12 credits, so GPA = 3.26.

Common Mistakes and Disclaimer

  • Ignoring subject credits and using plain mark averages.
  • Using one university’s grade boundaries for another.
  • Rounding too early before final GPA calculation.

Disclaimer: Grade boundaries may vary by university, faculty, and year. Always verify reference conversion rules in your target form or institution notice.

Related links: GPA to Percentage, Percentage to GPA, CGPA Calculator.

When accuracy matters, compare at least one subject manually after conversion to confirm grade band mapping is consistent with your reference scale.

For application safety, keep one screenshot or note of your input rows so you can quickly explain how the GPA was calculated if a college or employer asks for clarification.