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Transfer GPA Calculator: Community College

Calculate your community college GPA on the 4.0 scale and find the transfer GPA you need in remaining coursework to hit your transfer target.

Enter your community college courses, credit hours, and letter grades. Your GPA updates as you type.
Course Credits Grade Remove
GPA scale and transfer eligibility reference
GradePointsTransfer Eligibility
A+ / A4.0*Excellent: competitive for selective UC/CSU programs
A-3.7Very strong: TAG eligible at most UC TAG campuses
B+3.3Strong: meets most competitive transfer thresholds
B3.0Good: UC minimum competitive range, most CSU programs
B-2.7Eligible: meets many 4-year university minimums
C+2.3Marginal: above 2.0 floor, limited competitive options
C2.0At the minimum threshold for most transfer programs
C-1.7Below 2.0 average: academic support recommended
D+ / D1.3 / 1.0Course typically does not satisfy transfer requirements
F0.0No credit; significantly lowers cumulative GPA
P / NP / WnoneExcluded from GPA calculation; credits may still count

* A+ = 4.0 at most US colleges; a minority award 4.3.

How Transfer GPA Is Calculated at Community College

Community colleges use the same 4.0 scale as four-year universities. Your GPA is credit-weighted, meaning each course contributes grade points in proportion to how many credits it carries. A 4-credit science lab course has roughly one-third more impact on your GPA than a 3-credit elective earning the same letter grade. That asymmetry matters when you're trying to raise a borderline transfer GPA in a limited number of remaining semesters.

Community College GPA Formula
Transfer GPA = Sum of (Grade Points x Credit Hours) for all transferable courses Total transferable credit hours attempted
Where:
  • Grade Points: A/A+ = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, B- = 2.7, C+ = 2.3, C = 2.0, C- = 1.7, D+ = 1.3, D = 1.0, D- = 0.7, F = 0.0
  • P/NP and W grades earn zero grade points and are excluded from the calculation
  • Only transferable, college-level courses count (not remedial or pre-collegiate courses)
Example: You earn a B+ (3.3) in 3-credit English, an A- (3.7) in 4-credit Statistics, and a B (3.0) in 3-credit History. Quality points: (3.3 x 3) + (3.7 x 4) + (3.0 x 3) = 9.9 + 14.8 + 9.0 = 33.7. Total credits: 10. Transfer GPA = 33.7 / 10 = 3.37.

The Transfer Target mode solves the formula in reverse. When you know your current GPA and credits, and you have a target in mind, the calculator finds the exact GPA you need in remaining credits:

Transfer Target Formula
Required GPA in remaining credits = (Target GPA x Total Credits) minus (Current GPA x Credits Completed) Credits remaining
Example: Current GPA 2.80 over 30 credits, target 3.20, 30 credits remaining: Required GPA = (3.20 x 60 - 2.80 x 30) / 30 = (192 - 84) / 30 = 3.60. You need a 3.60 GPA in remaining coursework to reach a 3.20 cumulative.

Which Courses Count in Your Transfer GPA

Not every course on your community college transcript counts toward the transfer GPA that universities evaluate. Transferable courses at California community colleges are generally numbered 1 through 47 for UC transfer and 1 through 99 for CSU. Remedial and pre-collegiate courses (numbered 100 or above at many California colleges, or with a special designation) do not count in the transfer GPA. ASSIST.org, the California articulation database, lets you look up exactly which courses from your college transfer to any UC or CSU campus. Out-of-state students transferring to non-California universities should check the receiving school's transfer credit equivalency guide directly.

Pass/No Pass courses are excluded from the GPA calculation regardless of the level of work required. A student who takes Introduction to Sociology as P/NP earns the credit if they pass, but gets neither a grade point boost nor a penalty. Withdrawal grades (W) similarly carry no grade points. Incomplete grades (I) are temporary: if the incomplete is not resolved by the deadline your college sets, it converts to an F or a non-punitive notation depending on institutional policy.

Transfer GPA Requirements by University Type

Most students targeting transfer need a 2.0 minimum just to be eligible, but eligibility is not competitiveness. The table below shows realistic thresholds for common transfer targets.

Minimum and competitive transfer GPA requirements by institution type (2025 data)
Institution Type Minimum Transfer GPA Competitive GPA Notes
UC system (non-TAG) 2.4 (CA residents) / 2.8 (non-residents) 3.5 to 3.8+ UCLA average admitted transfer GPA approximately 3.73; UC Berkeley approximately 3.70
UC TAG campuses (Davis, Irvine, Merced, Riverside, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz) 2.4 to 3.2 (varies by campus and major) 3.0 to 3.2 Guaranteed admission when all TAG coursework and GPA requirements are met
CSU system (general) 2.0 2.5 to 3.0 Impacted programs (nursing, business, CS) often require 3.0 or above
Private universities 3.0 typical 3.5+ Full-file review; many private schools actively recruit community college transfers
Out-of-state public flagships 2.5 to 3.0 3.0 to 3.5 Selective flagships (Michigan, Georgia, UNC) closer to 3.0 to 3.5
Phi Theta Kappa (honor society) 3.5 cumulative 3.5+ Requires 12+ degree-applicable credit hours at member institution

California TAG: Transfer Admission Guarantee

The Transfer Admission Guarantee is a formal agreement between California community colleges and six UC campuses. If you complete the required coursework and hit the GPA threshold for your campus and major combination, UC guarantees your admission. GPA requirements range from 2.4 at UC Merced for most majors to 3.2 for some majors at UC Irvine or UC Santa Barbara. You apply for TAG in September of your transfer year; the deadline is not the same as the general UC application deadline. The two impacted campuses, UCLA and UC Berkeley, do not participate in TAG.

For step-by-step course-to-course articulation between your specific community college and any UC or CSU campus, use ASSIST.org. It shows exactly which of your courses satisfy UC lower-division requirements and which count toward your major preparation, saving you from completing courses that won't help your transfer case.

Required GPA in Remaining Credits to Reach Common Transfer Targets

Required GPA in remaining 30 credits to reach cumulative transfer targets from different starting points
Current GPA Credits Done Reach 2.75 Reach 3.00 Reach 3.20 Reach 3.50
2.00303.504.00 (limit)Not achievableNot achievable
2.50303.003.503.90Not achievable
2.70302.803.303.70Not achievable
2.80302.703.203.60Not achievable
3.0030Already metAlready met3.404.00 (limit)
3.2030Already metAlready metAlready met3.80

Using the GPA Calculator for Community College Planning

The semester-by-semester planning use case is where this calculator pays off most. At the start of registration, enter your current cumulative GPA, the credits you've completed, your transfer target, and the credits you're enrolling in next semester. The Transfer Target mode tells you the GPA you need in that semester to stay on pace. If the required semester GPA comes back above 4.0, you know your target isn't reachable in one semester and you can adjust: add credits, aim for a more accessible initial transfer target and reapply from a stronger school, or consider whether the timeline needs to extend.

A sophomore with a 2.6 GPA after 30 credits who wants to transfer to a CSU nursing program requiring a 3.0 needs to earn a 3.4 GPA in the remaining 30 credits. That's mostly Bs and some A-grades. Knowing that number going into semester three is more useful than discovering it one semester before the application deadline. For longer-horizon planning across many semesters, the raise GPA calculator shows how many credits at what GPA it takes to reach any target from your current standing.

Course Repeat Policies and Grade Forgiveness

Some community colleges offer grade renewal or academic renewal, where a student can petition to repeat a course and have the higher grade replace the original in the GPA calculation. Both grades typically remain on the transcript, but only the replacement grade counts toward the GPA. This policy differs meaningfully from schools that average both attempts or count both grades in full. If your community college offers grade renewal, a C replaced by an A in a 3-credit course adds 6 quality points to your total (from 6 to 12), which moves your cumulative GPA more than earning a new A in a separate course. Check your college's academic renewal policy in the catalog before registering for a repeat, because the window to petition often closes at a specific point in the semester.

Universities have their own policies about repeated courses. The UC system, when calculating the transfer GPA, uses the most recent grade if a course is repeated. CSU campuses follow individual policies. Always confirm which grade the receiving institution will use before banking on a repeat to rescue your transfer GPA.

Does the Community College GPA Follow You to the University?

Your community college grades stay on your community college transcript. When you transfer, most four-year universities start a new institutional GPA using only the courses you complete there. That new GPA determines Dean's List eligibility, academic probation, scholarship renewals, and graduation honors at the receiving school. Your community college record does not disappear, though. Graduate schools, medical schools, and law schools request transcripts from every institution you attended as an undergraduate. AMCAS and LSAC calculate a composite GPA across all undergraduate transcripts, so a rocky community college record affects professional school applications even if your university GPA is strong. Use the cumulative GPA calculator to model how multiple semesters of community college grades combine into a cumulative figure. If you have already transferred and need to track your new institutional GPA at a four-year school, the college GPA calculator handles semester and cumulative calculations on the same 4.0 scale with an optional prior GPA seed.

Always verify your official GPA with your college's registrar before submitting any application. Grading policies, transferable course definitions, and repeat grade rules vary by institution. The data in this calculator reflects the standard 4.0 unweighted scale used at most US community colleges; results may not match your official record if your institution uses a different scale or calculation method. Transfer GPA thresholds cited above come from UC Admissions and individual campus transfer admission profiles. Last verified: May 2025.

How to calculate GPA with transfer credits
To calculate your transfer GPA, use the same credit-weighted formula as any college GPA. Assign grade points to each letter grade (A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0, D = 1.0, F = 0.0, with plus/minus variants shifting by 0.3). Multiply each course's grade points by its credit hours to get quality points. Sum all quality points, then divide by total credit hours. Only transferable, graded courses count. Pass/No Pass courses and W (Withdrawal) grades are excluded from the calculation. The UC system excludes P grades from the GPA calculation and also excludes D grades when checking whether you satisfy the seven-course breadth pattern, though D grades still appear in the credit tally.
How to calculate transfer GPA for UC and CSU
The University of California calculates your transfer GPA using only UC-transferable courses (generally numbered 1-47 at California community colleges). You can verify course transferability at ASSIST.org, the official California articulation database. Multiply each eligible grade by its unit value to get grade points, sum them, then divide by total transferable units. The UC system rounds to the hundredths place without rounding up. Pass and Credit grades earn no grade points and are excluded. The six TAG campuses (Davis, Irvine, Merced, Riverside, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz) require a GPA between 2.4 and 3.4 depending on campus and major. For CSU, the minimum transfer GPA is 2.0 for most programs, though impacted programs typically require 2.5 to 3.0.
How do colleges calculate transfer GPA
Universities calculate the transfer GPA they use for admissions purposes from your official transcripts, looking only at courses the receiving institution considers transferable. Policies vary: some universities compute a cumulative GPA across all transferable courses from every institution you attended; others calculate a separate transfer GPA from each institution. Most US universities exclude P/NP grades, Withdrawal grades, and Incomplete grades from the GPA calculation. D grades may count in the GPA even when they don't satisfy course requirements. After you enroll, most universities start a new institutional GPA from your first graded course at that school, though your community college grades remain visible on your full transcript for graduate school applications.
Does community college GPA matter for transfer
Yes, significantly. Your community college GPA is the primary academic metric universities use to evaluate transfer applications, because you don't have SAT/ACT scores playing a role in most transfer admissions. A 2.0 is the technical floor at most public universities. Getting above 3.0 opens the door to most four-year programs. Reaching 3.5 makes you competitive for selective programs and qualifies you for the Transfer Admission Guarantee at six UC campuses. Phi Theta Kappa honor society requires a 3.5 cumulative GPA and is meaningful context in transfer applications. Some competitive programs in nursing, engineering, and business calculate a separate prerequisite GPA, so a 3.2 overall with a 2.8 in your major prerequisites may still flag you during review.
How do grad schools calculate GPA community college
Graduate schools typically calculate a cumulative GPA across every undergraduate institution you attended, including community college. Applications like AMCAS (medical school), LSAC (law school), and AACOMAS (osteopathic medicine) use their own GPA recalculation methods that pull grades from every transcript on file, not just your most recent degree-granting institution. A 3.2 at your university combined with a 2.7 at community college will produce a lower composite GPA than your university transcript alone shows. This is one reason students who started at community college and later transferred should understand what their combined transcript record looks like. Some graduate programs weight the last 60 credits more heavily, which can help students who improved over time.
Do P/NP grades affect community college GPA
Pass (P) and No Pass (NP) grades do not affect your GPA because no grade points are assigned. A Pass typically requires at least a C (2.0) level of performance. These courses still appear on your transcript and the credits may count toward degree requirements at your community college, but they carry zero weight in the GPA calculation. When applying to transfer, some universities limit how many P/NP units they accept as part of the transferable course package. The UC system, for example, accepts P/NP graded courses as transferable but excludes them from the transfer GPA calculation entirely. If you're borderline on GPA for a selective program, taking a course P/NP removes an opportunity to raise your GPA.
How to calculate transfer GPA multiple colleges
If you attended more than one community college, most universities calculate a single transfer GPA that pools all transferable courses from every institution. To calculate this yourself: collect every transferable course from all schools, multiply each grade's point value by the course unit count, sum all quality points across all schools, then divide by total transferable units from all schools combined. Do not average the separate GPAs from each institution. A student with 30 credits at a 3.2 GPA from one school and 15 credits at a 3.8 GPA from another has a combined transfer GPA of (3.2 x 30 + 3.8 x 15) / 45 = (96 + 57) / 45 = 3.40, not the 3.5 average of 3.2 and 3.8.