How GPA Is Calculated at New Zealand Universities
New Zealand universities calculate GPA using a 9-point credit-weighted formula. The formula is consistent across the eight publicly funded universities: the University of Auckland (UoA), Victoria University of Wellington (Te Herenga Waka, VUW), the University of Canterbury (UC), Massey University, Lincoln University, Auckland University of Technology (AUT), the University of Otago, and the University of Waikato. Each paper contributes its grade point value multiplied by its credit weight; the sum of those weighted values is divided by total enrolled credits.
- Credits = the NZQA credit value of each paper (typically 15 or 30 at most NZ universities)
- Grade Points = the 9-point scale value of the letter grade (A+ = 9.0, A = 8.0, A- = 7.0, B+ = 6.0, B = 5.0, B- = 4.0, C+ = 3.0, C = 2.0, D = 1.0, F = 0.0 at most universities)
- Sum = total across all enrolled papers; failed papers (F = 0 grade points) still add credits to the denominator and pull GPA down
Failed papers count toward the denominator but contribute 0 grade points to the numerator at most NZ universities. This pulls the cumulative GPA down even when you pass all other papers. A single failed 15-credit paper at F (0 GP) in a semester where you otherwise earned B+ grades across four other 15-credit papers reduces your semester GPA from 6.0 to 5.0, moving you from Second Class Division 1 to Division 2 territory. Use Percentage mode in the calculator above if you have raw marks rather than letter grades; it applies the standard NZ percentage bands automatically.
Most NZ papers are weighted at 15 or 30 NZQA credits. Some universities use the term "points" rather than credits, but the GPA formula treats them identically. A standard full-time NZ year is 120 credits (eight 15-credit papers or four 30-credit papers). The exact credit value per paper appears on your official transcript and course outline.
UC Grading Scale at the University of Canterbury
The University of Canterbury (UC) grading scale is the primary search keyword for this page because UC uses a different grade alphabet from the other seven NZ universities. Understanding the differences is important for Canterbury students calculating GPA and for transcript readers evaluating UC records.
| Grade | Mark Range | Grade Points | UC Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 90 to 100% | 9 | Exceptional |
| A | 85 to 89.9% | 8 | Excellent |
| A- | 80 to 84.9% | 7 | Very good |
| B+ | 75 to 79.9% | 6 | Good |
| B | 70 to 74.9% | 5 | Satisfactory |
| B- | 65 to 69.9% | 4 | Adequate |
| C+ | 60 to 64.9% | 3 | Pass, above minimum |
| C | 55 to 59.9% | 2 | Pass |
| C- | 50 to 54.9% | 1 | Minimum pass at UC |
| D | 40 to 49.9% | 0 | Fail at UC (not a pass) |
| E | 0 to 39.9% | -1 | Fail, actively lowers GPA |
| R | 50%+ | 1 | Restricted pass; not accepted as prerequisite |
| X | n/a | -3 | Academic dishonesty |
Three features distinguish the UC grading scale from all other NZ universities. First, UC includes a C- grade (grade point 1, 50 to 54.9%) as the minimum passing grade, matching the UoA minimum pass at 50%, whereas at Massey, Lincoln, AUT, Otago, and Waikato the minimum pass is C (55%) or D (40%), depending on the institution. Second, UC's D grade (40 to 49.9%) carries 0 grade points and is a fail, unlike the standard NZ convention where D (40 to 54%) is a low pass at 1 grade point. Third, UC's E grade (0 to 39.9%) carries -1 grade points, meaning an E in a 30-credit paper actively reduces your GPA below the level the passing papers establish.
The E grade's -1 value is the most important correction from common online sources, many of which incorrectly state that E = 0 grade points at UC. The UC official grading-scale page at canterbury.ac.nz confirms E = -1. A UC student who earns one E in a 15-credit paper alongside four 15-credit A- passes (7 each) would calculate: GPA = (15x7 + 15x7 + 15x7 + 15x7 + 15x-1) / 75 = (105+105+105+105-15) / 75 = 405 / 75 = 5.40, pulling from an otherwise 7.0 average to 5.40.
The R grade (Restricted Pass, grade point 1) is issued when UC accepts work that meets a minimum standard but does not satisfy a specific prerequisite requirement. R grades count toward graduation credit but cannot be used to demonstrate prerequisite completion in most programmes.
Source: University of Canterbury Grading Scale (official UC page).
NZ Grading Scale Across All Eight Universities
While the grade-point values from A+ to C are universal across NZ universities, the minimum passing grade and the treatment of failing grades vary. The table below compares the key differences to help you interpret transcripts from different institutions.
| University | Minimum Pass Grade | Min Pass % | D Grade Points | Lowest Fail Grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Auckland (UoA) | C- (1 GP) | 50% | 0 GP (fail: D+/D/D-) | D- (0 GP) |
| AUT | C- (1 GP, 45%) | 45% | 0 GP (fail) | E (0 GP) |
| Victoria University (VUW) | C (2 GP, 50%+) | 50% | 0 GP (fail) | F (0 GP) |
| University of Canterbury (UC) | C- (1 GP, 50%) | 50% | 0 GP (fail, 40-49%) | E (-1 GP) |
| Massey University | D (1 GP, 40%) | 40% | 1 GP (low pass) | F (0 GP) |
| Lincoln University | D (1 GP, 40%) | 40% | 1 GP (low pass) | F (0 GP) |
| University of Otago | D (1 GP, 40%) | 40% | 1 GP (low pass) | F (0 GP) |
| University of Waikato | D (1 GP, 40%) | 40% | 1 GP (low pass) | F (0 GP) |
The practical effect of these differences: a raw mark of 43% earns a D (low pass, 1 GP) at Massey, Lincoln, Otago, and Waikato, but a D (fail, 0 GP) at UC, a D (fail, 0 GP) at UoA and AUT, and a fail at VUW. When comparing transcripts from different NZ institutions, look at the grade point values on the transcript rather than the letter grade alone. Most international credential evaluators, including WES, apply institution-specific conversion tables that account for these differences.
Honour Classifications at New Zealand Universities
New Zealand honours degrees (Bachelor Honours, Honours Conjoint, and Postgraduate Honours) are classified using GPA from the honours year or programme. The four standard classifications apply across all NZ universities, though individual programmes may apply stricter thresholds or require a minimum grade in the dissertation component.
| Classification | GPA Threshold | Grade Band | UK Approximate | US 4.0 Approximate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Class Honours | 7.0 or above | A- average | First Class | 3.11 or above |
| Second Class Honours (Div 1) | 6.0 to 6.99 | B+ average | Upper Second (2:1) | 2.67 to 3.10 |
| Second Class Honours (Div 2) | 5.0 to 5.99 | B average | Lower Second (2:2) | 2.22 to 2.66 |
| Third Class Honours | 4.0 to 4.99 | B- average | Third Class | 1.78 to 2.21 |
First Class Honours is the threshold required for most funded PhD positions and competitive postgraduate scholarships. The University of Auckland Doctoral Scholarship, the Wellington Doctoral Scholarship at VUW, and MBIE Endeavour Fund PhD fellowships all typically require First Class Honours or equivalent. For honours-year dissertations, check whether your faculty weights the dissertation differently; at UoA a 60-credit dissertation has four times the GPA weight of a standard 15-credit lecture paper.
The calculator above displays your honour classification automatically alongside the GPA result. If you are forecasting your honours-year GPA, enter only the papers from that year and verify the result against your programme's specific regulations.
Convert NZ GPA to the US 4.0 Scale
New Zealand students applying to graduate programmes in the United States, Canada, or other countries that report GPA on a 4.0 scale need to convert their NZ 9-point GPA. The standard linear conversion is US GPA = (NZ GPA / 9) x 4. The table below shows the grade-by-grade equivalent alongside the NZ honour band.
| NZ Grade | NZ Grade Points | US 4.0 Equivalent | NZ Honour Band |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 9.0 | 4.00 | First Class |
| A | 8.0 | 3.56 | First Class |
| A- | 7.0 | 3.11 | First Class threshold |
| B+ | 6.0 | 2.67 | Second Class Div 1 threshold |
| B | 5.0 | 2.22 | Second Class Div 2 threshold |
| B- | 4.0 | 1.78 | Third Class threshold |
| C+ | 3.0 | 1.33 | Pass |
| C | 2.0 | 0.89 | Pass |
| D (standard NZ) | 1.0 | 0.44 | Low pass |
| F or D (at UC/UoA/AUT) | 0.0 | 0.00 | Fail |
These are linear approximations. For official US graduate applications, most programmes require a WES (World Education Services) or ECE (Educational Credential Evaluators) course-by-course evaluation. WES evaluations for NZ transcripts typically fall within 0.1 to 0.2 GPA points of the linear estimate and cost approximately USD 200 to 250. NZ academic transcripts are issued in English and do not require translation, which simplifies the WES evaluation process. For the reverse conversion (GPA back to percentage), see the GPA to percentage converter.
For UK graduate applications, the NZ honour classification provides a near-direct translation without a numerical conversion: First Class Honours maps to a UK First Class degree, Second Class Div 1 maps to an Upper Second (2:1), and Second Class Div 2 maps to a Lower Second (2:2). For Australian applications, the seven-point Australian GPA scale maps differently from the NZ 9-point scale; see the Australian GPA calculator for the NZ-to-AU comparison.
NZ University Directory: GPA Notes by Institution
All eight NZ universities use the 9-point GPA scale for credit-weighted records. The notes below cover institution-specific features relevant to GPA calculation and transcript interpretation. For university-specific calculators with institution-accurate percentage bands, see the spoke pages linked below each entry.
- University of Auckland (UoA): Three distinct fail grades: D+ (45 to 49%), D (40 to 44%), D- (0 to 39%), all carrying 0 grade points. Minimum pass is C- at 50%. Dean's Honours for graduating students with cumulative GPA 8.0 or above. Competitive Medicine (MBChB) and Law entry at UoA requires approximately 7.5 GPA or above in the first year. GPA appears via Student Services Online (SSO). See the University of Auckland GPA calculator for UoA-specific percentage bands.
- Auckland University of Technology (AUT): Percentage bands shifted 5 points lower than UoA: A+ starts at 85% (not 90%). Minimum pass is C- at 45%. Two fail grades: D (40 to 44%) and E (0 to 39%), both carrying 0 grade points. Dean's Commendation for semester GPA 8.0 or above. GPA appears in MyAUT. See the AUT GPA calculator for AUT-specific percentage bands.
- Victoria University of Wellington (VUW / Te Herenga Waka): Standard NZ 9-point scale. Minimum pass C at approximately 50%. GPA appears in the My Victoria student portal. Papers weighted at 15, 30, or 45 credits.
- University of Canterbury (UC): Uses the standard 9-point A through C scale but adds C- (1 GP, 50 to 54.9%), D as a fail (0 GP, 40 to 49.9%), E as a negative-grade fail (-1 GP, 0 to 39.9%), R (Restricted Pass, 1 GP), and X (Academic Dishonesty, -3 GP). This is the most distinctive grading scale among NZ universities. For GPA calculation at UC, include E grades at -1 grade points per paper. Source: UC official grading-scale page.
- Massey University: Minimum pass D at 40%. D carries 1 grade point (low pass). Massey uses grade descriptors: "First Class Pass" for A+ and A, "Second Class Pass" for B+, B, and B-. GPA appears in the Student Management System (SMS). Distance learning students calculate GPA with the same formula.
- Lincoln University: Standard NZ scale. Minimum pass D at 40% (1 GP). Agriculture, environmental management, and commerce focus. Papers typically 15 credits. Grade points match the national standard (A+ = 9 through F = 0).
- University of Otago: Standard NZ scale. Minimum pass D at 40% (1 GP). Health Sciences First Year (HSFY) programme feeds competitive Medicine (MBChB) entry; competitive GPA for Medicine continuation at Otago is approximately 7.5 or above. Otago papers are commonly 18 or 36 EFTS credits. Source: Otago HSFY programme page.
- University of Waikato: Standard NZ scale. Minimum pass D at 40% (1 GP). Papers commonly 15 or 30 credits. Management, science, and law are major disciplines. Grade points match the national standard.
NCEA to GPA: Secondary to University Grade Conversion
NCEA (National Certificate of Educational Achievement) is the NZ secondary-school qualification and uses a different grading vocabulary from the university GPA system. NCEA grades are: Not Achieved (NA), Achieved (A), Merit (M), and Excellence (E). These are standards-based and do not translate directly to the university 9-point GPA scale because university GPA is credit-weighted and programme-based while NCEA is achievement-based.
University entry in New Zealand is based on NZQA rank score (derived from NCEA results) rather than a GPA conversion. There is no official NCEA-to-GPA formula. Students should not attempt to convert their NCEA grades to a university GPA for application purposes. Once enrolled at university and earning letter grades on the 9-point scale, the GPA calculation follows the formula above. If you received NCEA credentials and are applying internationally, ask the target institution how they evaluate NZQA rank scores; most use NZQA's official secondary transcript rather than requiring a GPA conversion.