What Is a Good GPA at MIT?
On MIT's 5.0 scale, a GPA of 4.5 or above (roughly equivalent to 3.6 on a 4.0 scale) earns Dean's List recognition. The average undergraduate GPA at MIT sits near 4.48 on the 5.0 scale. There are no Latin honors. Academic difficulty rather than rank shapes the recognition culture.
The average undergraduate GPA at MIT sits near 4.48, drawn from the MIT registrar policy and aggregated reporting. Enter your courses in the calculator above to see where your cumulative GPA lands relative to that figure.
How MIT Calculates GPA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) uses a 5.0 grade point scale and does not use plus/minus modifiers, A, B, C, D, F only. The school uses a 5.0 scale where an A is worth 5.0, which matters when converting letter grades from a transcript that records A and A+ separately. Each course's grade points multiply by its credit hours, those quality points sum across all courses, and the total divides by total credits attempted.
MIT GPA Formula
GPA = Sum(Grade Points x Credit Hours) / Sum(Credit Hours)
- Grade Points = letter-grade value on the 5.0 scale
- Credit Hours = credit value of the course on the MIT transcript
- A = 5.0 on the MIT scale; adjust all grade points proportionally
MIT Grading Policy Notes
MIT operates on a non-standard 5.0 scale: A = 5.0, B = 4.0, C = 3.0, D = 2.0, F = 0. There are no plus or minus modifiers and no Latin honors. Freshman first semester is Pass/No Record (P/NR), and the IAP intersession also uses P/NR. Academic standing is reviewed by the Committee on Academic Performance (CAP) rather than by hard GPA cutoffs.
MIT Honors and Recognition
Dean's List at MIT
MIT lists students with a GPA of 4.50 or higher on the Dean's List. The honor is computed per-term, so a single strong semester earns recognition even if the cumulative GPA sits lower.
Academic Standing and Repeat Policy at MIT
Academic Probation Threshold
MIT places students on academic probation when their cumulative GPA drops below 3.2. Probation usually triggers mandatory advising, restricts course registration, and can affect financial aid or scholarships. Use the calculator to model remaining semesters and see how many A or B grades would lift the GPA back above the 3.2 floor.
Academic Standing Tiers at MIT
- Good Standing: cumulative GPA at or above 3.2.
- Probation: cumulative GPA below 3.2.
- Suspension: cumulative GPA below 3.0 (or sustained probation across consecutive terms).
Repeating a Course at MIT
Under MIT's repeat policy, both attempts remain on the transcript and count toward the GPA. This calculator treats every entered row as a distinct graded attempt; if your school replaces the old grade, leave off the original, and if both count, enter both lines. Always confirm the final transcript version with the registrar before relying on a projected GPA.
Grade Forgiveness at MIT
Yes. MIT freshmen receive Pass/No Record (P/NR) grades during their first semester, protecting the GPA during the academic transition. Both attempts at a repeated course remain on the transcript.
Major GPA Requirements at MIT
Most majors require a 3.0 minimum on the 5.0 scale to remain in good standing in the major. Course 6 (EECS) and Course 16 (AeroAstro) often expect 4.0 or higher in core technical prerequisites.
What Makes MIT Grading Distinctive
- Uses a 5.0 grade point scale (not 4.0)
- No plus or minus grades, no Latin honors
- First-semester freshmen receive Pass/No Record only
MIT at a Glance
- Institution type
- private research
- Location
- Cambridge, MA
- Undergraduate enrollment
- 11,934
- Founded
- 1861
- Athletic conference
- NEWMAC
- Average undergrad GPA
- 4.48
- Registrar source
- MIT official grading policy
Related GPA Tools
To roll this MIT GPA into a cumulative figure across multiple semesters, use the cumulative GPA calculator. For a semester-by-semester view with optional prior-GPA import, use the college GPA calculator. To compute individual course grades before they hit your transcript, switch to the grade calculator.
Accuracy Note
This calculator follows the grading policy published by the MIT registrar as of 2026-04-18. Policies are reviewed periodically; the "Last verified" date in the footer reflects the most recent confirmation. Always cross-check your final GPA against your official transcript. The tool models the same formulas registrars use but cannot account for grade forgiveness petitions, audit decisions, or exceptions approved by the dean of students.