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Ireland Grade Calculator: QCA 4.2 and Honours Class

Calculate your Irish QCA on the 4.2 scale used at TCD, UCD, UCC, and NUI Galway. Get your Honours class (First, 2:1, 2:2) and US 4.0 GPA equivalent instantly.

Calculate your Irish university QCA

Enter each module with its credit value and Irish grade (A1 to F). The calculator uses the official QCA quality point values: A1=4.2, A2=4.0, B1=3.6, B2=3.2, B3=2.8, C1=2.4, C2=2.0, C3=1.6, D1=1.2, D2=0.8, F=0.0.

Enter each module with its credit value and grade. Your QCA updates as you type.
Module Credits Grade Remove
Irish grading scale reference (A1 to F, quality points, Honours thresholds)
Grade Quality Points Percentage Descriptor Honours Class
A14.270% and aboveDistinctionFirst Class (3.40+)
A24.065-69%DistinctionFirst Class (3.40+)
B13.660-64%Merit2:1 (3.00-3.39)
B23.255-59%Merit2:1 (3.00-3.39)
B32.850-54%Merit2:2 (2.40-2.99)
C12.445-49%Pass2:2 (2.40-2.99)
C22.040-44%PassThird (2.00-2.39)
C31.635-39%PassPass (1.60-1.99)
D11.230-34%PassPass (1.60-1.99)
D20.825-29%PassFail (below 1.60)
F0.0below 25%FailFail (below 1.60)

QCA thresholds per the Irish National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ). Honours classification thresholds: First 3.40+, 2:1 3.00 to 3.39, 2:2 2.40 to 2.99, Third 2.00 to 2.39, Pass 1.60 to 1.99, Fail below 1.60. US 4.0 equivalent = (QCA / 4.2) x 4.0.

How QCA Is Calculated at Irish Universities

The Quality Credit Average (QCA) is the standard academic performance metric at every Irish university, and it works on a 4.2 scale rather than the US 4.0 scale. The maximum is 4.2 because the top grade, A1, carries exactly 4.2 quality points. To calculate your QCA, multiply each module's quality point value by the number of credits it carries, sum all the products, and divide by total credits.

The calculator above runs this calculation live as you enter grades. Whether you use Letter mode (A1 through F) or Percentage mode (0 to 100), the result panel shows your QCA, your Irish Honours classification, total credits, and the US 4.0 GPA equivalent. Every Irish university using the Higher Education Authority framework applies this same credit-weighted QCA formula: Trinity College Dublin (TCD), University College Dublin (UCD), University College Cork (UCC), NUI Galway, Dublin City University (DCU), University of Limerick (UL), and Maynooth University.

Irish QCA Formula
QCA = Sum(Quality Points x Credits) Sum(Credits)
Where:
  • Quality Points = the grade point value for each module (A1=4.2, A2=4.0, B1=3.6, B2=3.2, B3=2.8, C1=2.4, C2=2.0, C3=1.6, D1=1.2, D2=0.8, F=0.0)
  • Credits = the ECTS credit weight of each module (Irish modules typically carry 5, 10, or 15 credits; a full academic year is 60 credits)
  • Sum = total across every module contributing to your degree or the period you are calculating
Example: A third-year student at NUI Galway has four modules: Economic Policy (10 credits, B1=3.6), Statistics (10 credits, A2=4.0), Research Methods (5 credits, B2=3.2), and a Dissertation (15 credits, A1=4.2). Weighted products: 3.6x10 + 4.0x10 + 3.2x5 + 4.2x15 = 36 + 40 + 16 + 63 = 155. Total credits: 40. QCA = 155 / 40 = 3.875. Honours class: First Class Honours. US 4.0 equiv = (3.875 / 4.2) x 4.0 = 3.69.

One practical detail: most Irish degree programmes count all years toward the final QCA, but many apply year weighting where final-year modules carry more influence. A common scheme weights Year 1 at 0 percent, Year 2 at 30 percent, and Year 3 at 70 percent for a three-year degree. Always check your programme regulations to see whether year weighting applies, because it can shift a borderline QCA by a few hundredths of a point.

Irish University Grade Scale: A1 to F with Quality Points

Each letter grade on the Irish scale maps to a fixed quality point value. The scale runs from 11 distinct levels: two Distinction grades (A1 and A2), three Merit grades (B1, B2, B3), four Pass grades (C1, C2, C3, D1), one marginal pass (D2), and Fail (F). The percentage boundaries below are standard across most Irish universities, though individual programme regulations may use slightly tighter pass thresholds.

Grade Quality Points Percentage Range Descriptor
A14.270% and aboveDistinction (highest)
A24.065 to 69%Distinction
B13.660 to 64%Merit (upper)
B23.255 to 59%Merit
B32.850 to 54%Merit (lower)
C12.445 to 49%Pass (upper)
C22.040 to 44%Pass
C31.635 to 39%Pass (lower)
D11.230 to 34%Pass (marginal)
D20.825 to 29%Pass (marginal)
F0.0below 25%Fail

UCD uses different grade labels on its student portal (A+, A, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, F) but maps them to the same quality points. An A+ at UCD is 4.2, A is 4.0, B+ is 3.6, B is 3.2, B- is 2.8, C+ is 2.4, C is 2.0, C- is 1.6, D+ is 1.2, D is 0.8, F is 0.0. If you're a UCD student, use the table above to find your equivalent A1-F label before entering grades.

Irish Degree Classification System: First, 2:1, 2:2, Third, Pass

Irish honours degrees are classified using cumulative QCA thresholds at graduation. The system closely follows the British honours classification model but uses QCA rather than a raw percentage average.

  • First Class Honours (1:1 or First): QCA 3.40 to 4.20. Highly competitive for PhD programmes at Trinity, UCD, or UK Russell Group universities. Roughly equivalent to a UK First (70% and above) and a US GPA of 3.24 to 4.00.
  • Second Class Honours Grade 1 (2:1): QCA 3.00 to 3.39. The standard target for Irish and UK graduate programmes, law school, and professional training. The minimum most Irish employers list in graduate job advertisements. Roughly equivalent to a UK Upper Second and a US GPA of 2.86 to 3.23.
  • Second Class Honours Grade 2 (2:2): QCA 2.40 to 2.99. A solid pass, sufficient for many roles and some graduate programmes. Roughly equivalent to a UK Lower Second and a US GPA of 2.29 to 2.85.
  • Third Class Honours: QCA 2.00 to 2.39. The minimum honours classification. Limits access to some postgraduate programmes. Roughly equivalent to a UK Third and a US GPA of 1.90 to 2.28.
  • Pass: QCA 1.60 to 1.99. Degree awarded without honours status.
  • Fail: QCA below 1.60. Degree not awarded; repeat examinations may be available.

A student at DCU who finishes three years with a consistent mix of B2 and B3 grades (quality points 3.2 and 2.8) can expect a QCA in the low 3.0s, landing at the bottom of the 2:1 band. One strong dissertation worth 15 credits, graded A1, could push that QCA above 3.10 and cement the classification. The credit weighting makes final-year projects unusually influential on the overall QCA when they carry 15 or 20 credits.

Year Weighting and How It Affects Your Final Grade

Most Irish university programmes do not weight all years equally. The most common arrangement for a Level 8 honours degree (three or four years) gives Year 1 zero or minimal weighting and concentrates the calculation on later years where the academic content is most advanced.

Common year-weighting schemes used at Irish universities for Level 8 honours degrees
Scheme Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Note
Common (most programmes)0%30%70%Year 1 used only for progression, not classification
Alternative0%40%60%Used in some science and arts programmes
Equal weight (4-year)10%20%30%Year 4 = 40%, used in some four-year degrees
Include Year 110%30%60%Less common; appears in some professional programmes

If your programme uses year weighting, the calculator above can still help you check your classification for individual years. To project your full weighted classification, calculate the QCA for each weighted year separately, then apply the weighting percentages manually. The formula: Weighted QCA = (QCA Year 2 x 0.30) + (QCA Year 3 x 0.70) for the common scheme. Your programme handbook or academic registrar page will state the exact weighting applicable to your course.

CAO Points and QCA: Two Separate Systems

Two numerical metrics define an Irish student's academic record, and they are frequently confused by students applying abroad.

CAO points come from Leaving Certificate results and determine whether a student gains a place at their preferred university programme. Points are awarded for the best six subjects at Higher Level or Ordinary Level, with a maximum of 625 (600 standard plus 25 bonus points for Higher Level Mathematics). CAO points are a one-time admissions score, calculated before university begins, and carry no weight once a student is enrolled.

QCA starts accumulating from the first semester of Year 1 and reflects all graded university modules. It determines the final degree classification at graduation. A student who enters with 400 CAO points could graduate with a First Class Honours QCA. The two numbers measure entirely different things across entirely different stages of education.

US and UK graduate school applications ask for the QCA or equivalent university academic record. CAO points are a pre-university metric that graduate admissions offices outside Ireland do not use. If an application form asks for a high school GPA and a college GPA, enter your Leaving Certificate result as the school-level indicator and your QCA as the college-level academic record.

Convert Irish QCA to US 4.0 GPA

Irish graduates applying to US graduate schools need their QCA expressed on the 4.0 scale. Because the Irish QCA maximum is 4.2 rather than 4.0, the conversion is a linear rescaling.

Irish QCA to US 4.0 GPA Conversion
US GPA = QCA x 4.0 4.2
Where:
  • QCA = your cumulative Quality Credit Average on the Irish 4.2 scale
  • 4.2 = the maximum possible QCA (all modules graded A1)
  • 4.0 = the maximum US GPA scale value
Example: QCA of 3.40 (First Class threshold): US GPA = (3.40 x 4.0) / 4.2 = 13.60 / 4.2 = 3.238, rounds to 3.24. QCA of 4.20 (maximum) converts to exactly 4.0. QCA of 3.00 (2:1 minimum): (3.00 x 4.0) / 4.2 = 12.00 / 4.2 = 2.857, rounds to 2.86.
Irish QCA to US 4.0 GPA conversion reference
Irish QCA Irish Honours Class US 4.0 GPA US Letter Equiv.
4.20First Class Honours4.00A
3.80First Class Honours3.62A-
3.40First Class Honours (min)3.24B+
3.20Second Class Hons. Grade 13.05B
3.00Second Class Hons. Grade 1 (min)2.86B-
2.80Second Class Hons. Grade 22.67B-
2.40Second Class Hons. Grade 2 (min)2.29C+
2.00Third Class Honours (min)1.90C
1.60Pass (min)1.52D+

For formal US graduate school applications, World Education Services (WES) and Qualifications Recognition Ireland (QQI) provide authoritative credential evaluations. The linear conversion above matches what most credential evaluators produce and is accurate for self-reported figures on application forms.

Major Irish Universities and the QCA Scale

All seven Irish universities and most technological universities use the 4.2 QCA scale with the same honour classification thresholds. The calculator above works for any of these institutions.

Irish universities using the 4.2 QCA scale
University Abbreviation City Scale Notes
Trinity College DublinTCDDublin4.2 QCAGrades displayed as percentage; maps to A1-F scale
University College DublinUCDDublin4.2 QCAInternal labels A+ to F; same quality point values
University College CorkUCCCork4.2 QCAStandard A1-F notation on official transcript
National University of Ireland GalwayNUIGGalway4.2 QCANow University of Galway since 2022
Dublin City UniversityDCUDublin4.2 QCAStandard A1-F notation
University of LimerickULLimerick4.2 QCAStandard A1-F notation
Maynooth UniversityMUMaynooth4.2 QCAStandard A1-F notation

Technological universities (TU Dublin, Munster Technological University, Atlantic Technological University, South East Technological University) and institutes of technology also use the QCA framework. Medical and other professional schools aligned with the Irish National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ) follow the same 4.2 scale, though classification descriptors may differ for postgraduate programmes.

ECTS Credits: How Irish Module Credit Values Work

Irish universities use the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) for module credit weighting. One ECTS credit represents approximately 25 hours of student workload, including lectures, self-study, assignments, and examinations. A standard full-time academic year carries 60 ECTS credits, which means roughly 1,500 hours of study.

Most Irish modules carry 5, 10, or 15 ECTS credits. A 10-credit module is worth twice as much toward your QCA as a 5-credit module. This is why entering the correct credit value in the calculator matters: a 15-credit dissertation graded A1 (4.2 quality points) can raise your QCA more than several smaller modules combined. The credit-weighted QCA formula automatically accounts for this.

When applying to European graduate programmes, ECTS credits transfer directly. A 180-credit Irish Level 8 bachelor's degree is broadly equivalent to a 180-ECTS European first-cycle degree. For US applications, credential evaluators typically note that 1 ECTS credit is approximately half a US semester credit hour, so a 60-credit Irish academic year maps to about 30 US semester credits. The GPA to ECTS calculator handles multi-system conversions for Erasmus and European graduate applications.

Using Your Irish QCA for Graduate School Applications

Irish graduates applying to UK universities can use the following broadly accepted equivalence bands: a QCA of 3.40 and above maps to First Class Honours; 3.00 to 3.39 maps to Upper Second Class (2:1); 2.40 to 2.99 maps to Lower Second Class (2:2). UK universities understand the Irish system well and typically accept QCA transcripts without a conversion.

For US graduate schools, submit both your QCA transcript and a WES evaluation for top programmes. Smaller US universities may accept a self-reported converted GPA using the (QCA / 4.2) x 4.0 formula. A QCA of 3.40 (First Class) converts to approximately 3.24 on the US 4.0 scale, which is competitive for admission at many strong US graduate programmes but falls short of the 3.5+ threshold at the most selective schools. A QCA of 3.80 converts to 3.62, which is strong across most US graduate programmes. For multi-scale GPA translation, the GPA converter handles US, UK, European, and other national systems in one place.

Qualifications Recognition Ireland (QQI) provides authoritative comparisons between the Irish National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ) and international systems. The Higher Education Authority (HEA) publishes the framework context for degree levels and classifications. Both are standard citation sources for credential assessors reviewing Irish degrees abroad.

This Ireland grade calculator estimates your QCA on the Irish 4.2 scale and the US 4.0 GPA equivalent using the credit-weighted formula described above. Irish universities apply programme-specific regulations for honours classification, year weighting, supplemental examination policies, and credit transfer; always verify against your programme handbook and your academic registrar. For US graduate school applications, consult World Education Services (WES) for a credential evaluation. Additional sources: Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI), the Higher Education Authority (HEA), and the registrar pages at TCD, UCD, UCC, University of Galway, DCU, UL, and Maynooth University.

How to calculate college grades Ireland
To calculate college grades in Ireland, use the Quality Credit Average (QCA) formula: multiply each module's quality points by its credit value, sum all the products, then divide by total credits. Quality point values run from A1 (4.2) down through A2 (4.0), B1 (3.6), B2 (3.2), B3 (2.8), C1 (2.4), C2 (2.0), C3 (1.6), D1 (1.2), D2 (0.8), and F (0.0). For example, if you earned a B1 (3.6) in a 10-credit module and an A2 (4.0) in another 10-credit module, your QCA = (3.6 x 10 + 4.0 x 10) / 20 = 76 / 20 = 3.80, which is First Class Honours. The calculator above handles this automatically for as many modules as you need.
What QCA is First Class Honours in Ireland?
A QCA of 3.40 or higher earns First Class Honours at most Irish universities. The full classification system: First Class Honours (QCA 3.40 to 4.20), Second Class Honours Grade 1 or 2:1 (3.00 to 3.39), Second Class Honours Grade 2 or 2:2 (2.40 to 2.99), Third Class Honours (2.00 to 2.39), Pass (1.60 to 1.99), and Fail (below 1.60). A First (also written 1.1) is required for direct PhD programme entry at most Irish and UK universities. On the US 4.0 scale, the First Class threshold of QCA 3.40 converts to approximately 3.24.
What GPA scale do Irish universities use?
Irish universities use the Quality Credit Average (QCA) on a 4.2 scale, not the US 4.0 scale. The 4.2 maximum exists because the top grade (A1, awarded for 70 percent and above) carries 4.2 quality points. Trinity College Dublin (TCD), University College Dublin (UCD), University College Cork (UCC), NUI Galway, Dublin City University (DCU), University of Limerick (UL), and Maynooth University all use this framework. UCD displays grades as A+, A, B+, and so on internally, but maps them to the same 0 to 4.2 quality point values. The QCA is calculated using credit weighting: modules with more ECTS credits carry more weight in the final average.
What are CAO points and are they the same as QCA?
CAO points and QCA are completely different systems. CAO (Central Applications Office) points come from Leaving Certificate results and determine entry to Irish university programmes, with a maximum of 625 points. CAO is a one-time admissions score before university begins. QCA is the university GPA equivalent: it accumulates across all modules from Year 1, determines the final degree honours classification, and is the figure Irish graduates present to graduate schools abroad. A student with 550 CAO points (strong school results) could graduate with a 2:1 or higher QCA, but the two numbers measure entirely different things. For US graduate school applications, admissions offices ask for the QCA, not CAO points.
How is my degree grade calculated in Ireland?
Your degree grade in Ireland is determined by your cumulative QCA at the point of graduation. Most Irish universities calculate the final QCA using all graded modules across the full degree, though some programmes apply year weighting where later years count more heavily. The most common weighting scheme excludes or reduces the weight of Year 1 (for example, Year 1 = 0 percent, Year 2 = 30 percent, Year 3 = 70 percent for a three-year degree). Some programmes use equal year weighting. Check your programme handbook or speak to your academic registrar to confirm whether year weighting applies to your specific degree, as this can shift a borderline classification.
How do I convert an Irish QCA to a US GPA?
To convert an Irish QCA to a US 4.0 GPA, divide your QCA by 4.2 and multiply by 4.0: US GPA = (QCA / 4.2) x 4.0. A QCA of 3.40 (First Class threshold) converts to (3.40 / 4.2) x 4.0 = 3.24. A QCA of 4.20 (maximum) converts to exactly 4.0. A QCA of 3.00 (2:1 minimum) converts to 2.86. The calculator above runs this automatically. For formal US graduate school applications, World Education Services (WES) or Qualifications Recognition Ireland (QQI) can provide an official credential evaluation; the linear conversion above is accurate for self-reported figures on application forms.

Last verified: May 2026. Grade-point values and honours classification thresholds sourced from Quality and Qualifications Ireland (qqi.ie), the Higher Education Authority (hea.ie), and individual registrar offices at Trinity College Dublin, University College Dublin, University College Cork, University of Galway, Dublin City University, University of Limerick, and Maynooth University. WES evaluation guidance referenced from wes.org. If any Irish university updates its QCA scale or degree classification thresholds, verify with the relevant registrar before relying on this calculator for official purposes.