How AUT GPA Is Calculated on the 9-Point Grading Scale
Auckland University of Technology calculates GPA using the New Zealand 9-point GPV (Grade Point Value) system. The formula is straightforward: each paper's grade point value is multiplied by its credit point value, the products are summed, and that sum is divided by the total credit points enrolled.
Standard semester papers at AUT carry 15 credit points each. A typical full-time semester is four papers at 60 points total, and a standard AUT bachelor's degree is 360 points across three years. Both the D grade (40 to 44 percent, grade point 0) and the E grade (below 40 percent, grade point 0) are fail grades at AUT. They contribute no weighted grade points to the numerator, but their credit points still count in the denominator and pull the cumulative GPA down.
- Credit Points = the AUT credit point value of each paper (15 for a standard semester paper, 30 for a double paper or dissertation)
- Grade Points = the 9-point GPV of the letter grade (A+ = 9, A = 8, A- = 7, B+ = 6, B = 5, B- = 4, C+ = 3, C = 2, C- = 1, D = 0, E = 0)
- Sum = total across all enrolled papers, including failed papers (D and E still add credit points to the denominator)
The formula is available through the AUT scholarship GPA calculator page and the AUT student portal (MyAUT). The official AUT transcript, issued through MyAUT, shows your cumulative GPA alongside each paper's grade and credit points.
AUT Grading System: The NZ 9-Point GPV Scale
The AUT grading system assigns a Grade Point Value (GPV) from 9 to 0 to each letter grade. The percentage bands below are per the AUT Results and Grading policy. Two separate fail grades exist at AUT: D (40 to 44 percent) and E (0 to 39 percent, the low fail). Both convert to 0 grade points for GPA purposes, but they appear as distinct outcomes on your academic transcript.
| Grade | Percentage Range | Grade Points (GPV) | Description | US 4.0 (approx) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 85 to 100% | 9 | Outstanding / High First | 4.00 |
| A | 80 to 84% | 8 | Excellent / Clear First | 3.56 |
| A- | 75 to 79% | 7 | Very Good / Bare First | 3.11 |
| B+ | 70 to 74% | 6 | Good / High Second | 2.67 |
| B | 65 to 69% | 5 | Above Average / Clear Second | 2.22 |
| B- | 60 to 64% | 4 | Average / Bare Second | 1.78 |
| C+ | 55 to 59% | 3 | Sound Pass | 1.33 |
| C | 50 to 54% | 2 | Pass | 0.89 |
| C- | 45 to 49% | 1 | Marginal Pass | 0.44 |
| D | 40 to 44% | 0 | Fail | 0.00 |
| E | 0 to 39% | 0 | Low Fail | 0.00 |
AUT also records several non-graded outcomes: P (Pass, an ungraded pass for competency-based assessments), DNS (Did Not Sit), and W (Withdrawn, when a student formally withdraws before the census date). A P outcome counts as passing but carries no grade points and is excluded from the GPA calculation. DNS and W generally count as incomplete or fail depending on the timing relative to census date. Check your specific paper regulations and the AUT academic calendar for the exact treatment of any non-letter outcome on your record.
AUT Honours Classifications and Academic Recognition
AUT awards honours classifications on the bachelor with honours degree and postgraduate diploma based on the cumulative GPA across the qualification. First Class Honours requires a GPA of 7.0 or above on the 9-point scale, equivalent to a sustained A- average (75 percent or higher per paper). These classifications appear on the official AUT parchment and academic transcript.
| Classification | GPA Threshold | Grade Band | US 4.0 Equiv. | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Class Honours | 7.0 or above | A- average | 3.11+ | Highest AUT honours class |
| Second Class Div I | 6.0 to 6.99 | B+ average | 2.67 to 3.10 | Strong honours performance |
| Second Class Div II | 5.0 to 5.99 | B average | 2.22 to 2.66 | Solid honours pass |
| Pass (no class) | 2.0 to 4.99 | C to B- average | 0.89 to 2.21 | Passing, below honours |
| Fail | Below 2.0 | Below C | Below 0.89 | Does not meet honours standard |
AUT also recognises undergraduate academic excellence through the Dean's Commendation, awarded to students who complete a semester with a GPA of 8.0 or above across all enrolled papers. This does not appear on the official parchment but is noted on the academic transcript. The Vice-Chancellor's Award recognises extraordinary contribution to academic life at AUT beyond GPA alone.
For PhD entry, AUT generally requires First Class Honours (GPA 7.0+) or a master's degree at merit level. For master's programmes, the standard minimum is GPA 5.0 in relevant undergraduate study, though competitive programmes in the Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences, Business School, and School of Engineering typically prefer GPA 6.0 or above. Check the individual programme entry requirements on the AUT website before applying.
AUT Grading vs University of Auckland: Key Differences
Both AUT and the University of Auckland use the NZ 9-point scale with identical letter-to-grade-point mappings. For a student reading this and wondering whether their AUT transcript will translate directly when applying to Auckland or vice versa: the grade point numbers are the same, but the percentage bands differ.
| Grade | AUT Percentage Band | Univ. of Auckland Band | Grade Points (both) |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 85 to 100% | 90 to 100% | 9 |
| A | 80 to 84% | 85 to 89% | 8 |
| A- | 75 to 79% | 80 to 84% | 7 |
| B+ | 70 to 74% | 75 to 79% | 6 |
| B | 65 to 69% | 70 to 74% | 5 |
| B- | 60 to 64% | 65 to 69% | 4 |
| C+ | 55 to 59% | 60 to 64% | 3 |
| C | 50 to 54% | 55 to 59% | 2 |
| C- | 45 to 49% | 50 to 54% | 1 |
| D | 40 to 44% | 40 to 49% | 0 |
| E | 0 to 39% | 0 to 39% | 0 |
The practical effect: a raw mark of 82 percent earns an A at AUT (grade point 8) but an A- at the University of Auckland (grade point 7). At AUT, an A+ starts at 85 percent; at Auckland, it starts at 90 percent. This 5-percentage-point offset runs consistently across the scale. When applying internationally with an AUT transcript, evaluators such as WES (World Education Services) apply institution-specific conversion tables rather than the linear percentage-to-GPA formula, so the GPA number on your transcript is what matters, not the raw percentage band.
For a broader view of how the 9-point scale works across New Zealand, the New Zealand GPA calculator hub links the AUT, Otago, and other NZ university spoke calculators with a comparison of grading conventions at all eight NZ universities.
Convert AUT GPA to the US 4.0 Scale
US graduate schools, Canadian universities, and UK institutions often require a GPA on the 4.0 scale when reviewing international applications. The standard linear conversion for NZ transcripts is:
US GPA = (AUT GPA / 9.0) x 4.0
The table below shows the converted value at each AUT grade point. Most US master's programmes require a 3.0 minimum (equivalent to AUT GPA 6.75), and competitive PhD programmes typically want 3.5 or above (equivalent to AUT GPA 7.875):
| AUT Grade | AUT Grade Points | US 4.0 Equivalent | Classification Band |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 9.0 | 4.00 | First Class Honours |
| A | 8.0 | 3.56 | First Class Honours |
| A- | 7.0 | 3.11 | First Class Honours threshold |
| B+ | 6.0 | 2.67 | Second Class Div I threshold |
| B | 5.0 | 2.22 | Second Class Div II threshold |
| B- | 4.0 | 1.78 | Below honours threshold |
| C+ | 3.0 | 1.33 | Pass |
| C | 2.0 | 0.89 | Pass |
| C- | 1.0 | 0.44 | Marginal Pass |
| D / E | 0.0 | 0.00 | Fail |
These are linear approximations. For formal credential evaluations, WES and ECE apply institution-specific tables that account for AUT's percentage bands, which differ from most other NZ universities. AUT official transcripts are issued in English through the MyAUT student portal, accepted without translation by most international institutions. For a general GPA scale converter across multiple grading systems, including the US 4.0, UK, and Australian scales, see the GPA converter tool.
AUT GPA Calculator Tips for Common Scenarios
The calculator handles four common AUT grading scenarios: a single-semester snapshot, a full-degree cumulative GPA, a forecast for an honours year, and a postgraduate admission check. For the semester snapshot, enter only the papers from one semester (typically four 15-point papers for 60 points total). For the cumulative degree GPA, include every enrolled paper, pass and fail, from your full AUT record.
Two situations trip up most students. First, double papers and dissertations carry 30 credit points, not 15. If you enter 15 for a 30-point dissertation, the calculator will underweight that paper and produce a misleading GPA. Second, the D and E grades both contribute 0 grade points but still add their credit points to the denominator. A single E in an otherwise strong semester can drop a 7.5 GPA to under 6.5 depending on how many other papers you took that term.
For international applications, use the US 4.0 equivalent shown in the result panel as a rough guide, then request an official WES course-by-course evaluation. WES evaluations for AUT typically land within 0.1 to 0.2 GPA points of the linear estimate. For broader context on how your AUT GPA compares to other New Zealand institutions, see the GPA calculator main hub or the University of Otago GPA calculator for a direct comparison with the Otago grading scale.