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Portugal GPA Calculator: 0-20 Scale to US 4.0

The Portugal GPA calculator converts grades on the 0-20 numeric scale into a credit-weighted media, the Muito Bom classification, and the US 4.0 equivalent for grad school.

Portuguese University GPA Calculator

Portuguese universities use the 0 to 20 numeric scale with 10/20 as the passing minimum. Enter your grade and ECTS credits per course; the calculator returns your media, the Muito Bom classification, and the US 4.0 GPA equivalent for grad school applications.

Grade /20 ECTS Credits
Media (Credit-Weighted Average) 0.00 / 20.0
US 4.0 Equivalent: 0.00
Courses0
ECTS Credits0
Distinction-
Portuguese grade scale reference (Escala de 0 a 20)
Average /20ClassificationECTS LetterUS 4.0
18 - 20Muito Bom com DistincaoA4.00
16 - 17.99Muito Bom (Very Good)B3.00 - 4.00
14 - 15.99Bom (Good)C2.50 - 3.00
12 - 13.99Suficiente (upper)D1.75 - 2.50
10 - 11.99Suficiente (lower)E1.00 - 1.75
Below 10Reprovado (Fail)FX / F0.00

Canonical Portuguese university grading scale per Direcao-Geral do Ensino Superior (DGES). Public universities and most private institutions issue grades on the 0-20 numeric scale with the ECTS letter alongside on Bologna-compliant Diploma Supplements.

How the Portugal GPA Calculator Works (Media, Cumulative GPA, ECTS GPA)

The Portugal GPA calculator above runs the standard credit-weighted average formula used at every Portuguese university. Portuguese universities calculate a media ponderada (weighted average) on the 0 to 20 numeric scale: each course grade is multiplied by its ECTS credit value, the products are summed across all completed courses, and the total is divided by total ECTS credits. The result is your media, expressed out of 20.0 with one or two decimal places. Some students search for a "GPA calculator Portugal", a "Portugal GPA calculator", a "calculadora GPA", or an "ECTS GPA calculator" and land on this same tool; all three search variants refer to the same credit-weighted Portuguese media calculation.

Below the calculator, this hub covers the Portuguese 0-20 grading scale and its classification labels (Reprovado, Suficiente, Bom, Muito Bom, Muito Bom com Distincao), how the Portuguese media converts to a US 4.0 GPA for graduate school applications, the Bologna Process and ECTS credit conventions that govern Portuguese transcripts, university-specific grading policies at the University of Lisbon, the University of Porto, the University of Coimbra, NOVA University Lisbon, and the University of Minho, scholarship eligibility thresholds for FCT, Erasmus, Fulbright, and Gulbenkian, and how the Portuguese scale compares with France, Italy, Belgium, and Germany. What does GPA stand for? Grade Point Average, the cumulative academic metric used worldwide; in Portugal the equivalent term is media or media ponderada. The cumulative GPA calculator workflow is identical to the term GPA calculation, only the row count differs.

The Portuguese 0-20 Grading Scale and GPA Scale Classifications

Portuguese universities use a five-band numeric grading scale that appears on official transcripts (certidao de licenciatura) and Diploma Supplements. The canonical scale is published by the Direcao-Geral do Ensino Superior (DGES) and used uniformly at the University of Lisbon, the University of Porto, the University of Coimbra, NOVA University Lisbon, and all other public and private higher education institutions:

  • Muito Bom com Distincao (Excellent with Distinction): 18 to 20 out of 20. Exceptional academic performance. Less than 2 percent of Portuguese university graduates finish with this distinction. Equivalent to a US 4.0 A or summa cum laude.
  • Muito Bom (Very Good): 16 to 17.99. Strong academic record, competitive for graduate school admission and merit scholarships. Roughly 5 to 10 percent of the cohort. Equivalent to roughly a US 3.0 to 3.99 (B plus to A minus).
  • Bom (Good): 14 to 15.99. Solid academic standing, qualifying for most master programmes and Erasmus exchanges. Equivalent to roughly a US 2.5 to 3.0 (B minus to B).
  • Suficiente (Sufficient or Pass): 10 to 13.99. Minimum passing band; the modal Portuguese student grade falls in the 12 to 14 range. Equivalent to roughly a US 1.0 to 2.5 (D to C). Within Suficiente, 12 to 13.99 is the upper passing band and 10 to 11.99 is the lower; some universities subdivide for honours calculations.
  • Reprovado (Fail): below 10. No credit issued; the student must retake the unit or apply for a supplementary assessment (exame de recurso) within the academic year.

Portuguese grading is rigorous by European standards. The modal undergraduate grade across most faculties is between 12 and 14, which translates to a US 2.0 to 2.75. A student with a final licenciatura media of 14 is in solid academic standing; a media of 16 is genuinely competitive for graduate-programme admission and scholarship applications. Grades above 18 are uncommon and typically only seen in mestrado dissertation defences, doutoramento viva voce examinations, and in rare exceptional individual courses. The University of Porto registrar publishes that roughly 7 percent of licenciatura graduates finish with a media of 16 or above, and well under 1 percent finish above 18 (Source: Universidade do Porto, Relatorio Anual de Estatisticas Academicas).

How to Calculate GPA at a Portuguese University (Credit-Weighted Media)

Every Portuguese university uses the same credit-weighted media formula. Course grades are multiplied by their ECTS credit weight, summed, and divided by total ECTS credits. The formula is mathematically identical to the GPA calculator workflow used at US, Canadian, and UK universities; only the grade scale (0 to 20) and the credit unit (ECTS) differ.

Portuguese University Media Formula
Media = Sum(Grade x ECTS Credits) Sum(ECTS Credits)
Where:
  • Grade = the numeric grade you earned out of 20 (decimals permitted, e.g., 14.5)
  • ECTS Credits = the European Credit Transfer System credit value of the course on your transcript (typically 6 for a one-semester licenciatura course, 12 for an intensive lab or thesis component, 60 for a full academic year)
  • Sum = the running total across every completed course in the period (one semester for semester media, the full degree for licenciatura final media)
Example: A licenciatura student takes six 6-credit courses in one semester with grades 15, 14, 16, 13, 17, and 15 out of 20. Quality points = 15 x 6 + 14 x 6 + 16 x 6 + 13 x 6 + 17 x 6 + 15 x 6 = 90 + 84 + 96 + 78 + 102 + 90 = 540. Total ECTS credits = 36. Semester media = 540 / 36 = 15.0 out of 20. Classification = Bom (Good). US 4.0 equivalent = approximately 2.75.

Two Portugal-specific implementation details affect the media calculation. First, ECTS credit weighting is the norm. Portuguese transcripts always report each course as a number of ECTS credits, never as semester hours or contact hours alone. A 12-credit thesis course carries double the GPA weight of a 6-credit lecture course; a strong grade in the thesis pulls the final media up substantially more than the same grade in a single-semester unit. Second, supplementary assessments (exame de recurso) are common. Portuguese students who fail or wish to improve a grade can retake the assessment at the end of the semester; the final grade replaces the earlier one on the transcript for media calculation purposes. The calculator above lets you enter only the final grades that count for the official media; supplementary attempts and improvement attempts that were superseded should be omitted.

Convert Portuguese 0-20 Media to a US 4.0 GPA

Portuguese university graduates applying to US graduate programmes need their media expressed on the US 4.0 scale. The 0-20 to 4.0 mapping below is the piecewise conversion most US graduate programmes, credential evaluators (WES, ECE, Scholaro), and Portuguese university international offices apply for outgoing transcripts. The conversion is piecewise rather than linear because the Portuguese scale concentrates the modal student grade in the 12 to 14 band, which corresponds to the wider 1.5 to 2.5 US GPA range; the same student grade on a true linear conversion would be artificially deflated.

Portuguese 0-20 to US 4.0 GPA conversion table (used by WES, ECE, Scholaro)
Portuguese media (out of 20)ClassificationUS 4.0 GPAUS letter
19.0 - 20.0Muito Bom com Distincao (top)4.00A+ / A
18.0 - 18.99Muito Bom com Distincao4.00A
17.0 - 17.99Muito Bom (upper)3.50 - 3.99A-
16.0 - 16.99Muito Bom3.00 - 3.49B+
15.0 - 15.99Bom (upper)2.75 - 2.99B
14.0 - 14.99Bom2.50 - 2.74B-
13.0 - 13.99Suficiente (upper)2.10 - 2.49C+
12.0 - 12.99Suficiente1.75 - 2.09C
11.0 - 11.99Suficiente (lower)1.40 - 1.74C-
10.0 - 10.99Suficiente (minimum)1.00 - 1.39D
Below 10Reprovado (Fail)0.00F

For formal US graduate school applications, World Education Services (WES) generates an authoritative course-by-course US GPA from Portuguese transcripts (cost approximately USD 200 in 2026). Educational Credential Evaluators (ECE) and Scholaro are common alternatives accepted at most US graduate programmes. Most US graduate programmes accept a WES-style evaluation; some smaller programmes accept the unconverted Portuguese media with a self-conversion note based on the table above. The calculator on this page is for planning purposes; for binding admission and visa applications, a WES report (or equivalent) is the canonical source. Application services LSAC (law), AACOMAS (osteopathic medical), AADSAS (dental), and CASPA (physician assistant) handle their own conversions for Portuguese transcripts using broadly the same piecewise mapping.

Bologna Process, ECTS Credits, and Portuguese Higher Education

Portugal joined the Bologna Process in 1999 as one of the original 29 signatories of the Bologna Declaration. All Portuguese higher education programmes have been Bologna-compliant since the 2006 implementation deadline, structured around the three-cycle framework: licenciatura (first cycle, three years, 180 ECTS), mestrado (second cycle, two years, 120 ECTS), and doutoramento (third cycle, three to four years, no fixed ECTS but typically 180 to 240). A standard Portuguese academic year carries 60 ECTS credits split across two semesters; a one-semester course is usually 6 ECTS. Thesis components carry 18 to 30 ECTS for licenciatura final projects and 30 to 60 ECTS for mestrado dissertations.

The Bologna integration means Portuguese transcripts include three pieces of information per course: the numeric grade on the 0-20 scale, the ECTS credit value, and the ECTS letter grade (A through E for pass, FX and F for fail). The ECTS letter grade is meant to enable cross-country comparison: at any Bologna-compliant university, ECTS A represents roughly the top 10 percent of students passing, B the next 25 percent, C the next 30 percent, D the next 25 percent, and E the lowest 10 percent passing. In Portugal these bands map approximately to: A = 18 to 20, B = 15 to 17, C = 13 to 14, D = 11 to 12, E = 10. The calculator above reports the active ECTS letter alongside the numeric media so Portuguese students can present their transcript on either the local 0-20 scale or the cross-country ECTS letter scale when applying to universities elsewhere in the European Higher Education Area.

University-Specific Grading Policies in Portugal

All Portuguese public universities and most private institutions use the same 0-20 numeric scale, but the modal grade and the distribution shape differ across faculties. The University of Lisbon Faculty of Sciences publishes that the average final licenciatura media for the 2022-2023 cohort was 13.8 (Suficiente upper); the University of Porto Faculty of Engineering reports an average of 13.5; the Catholic University of Portugal Faculty of Law reports 14.2; ISCTE University Institute Lisbon Business School reports 14.6 for the management programme. Faculties of Medicine across Portugal report consistently higher modal grades (14 to 15) because admission is highly competitive and the entering cohort is unusually strong.

Portuguese university grading is generally absolute (not curved). Each assessment has an objective marking scheme and the final grade reflects mastery against published learning outcomes; the grade is not adjusted to fit a forced distribution. This differs from some UK and US institutions where forced curves are common. The implication for the calculator above is that your media accurately reflects your performance against the official marking scheme, and the US 4.0 conversion table is more reliable than a percentile-rank conversion would be.

Portuguese Universities: GPA Hub Directory

Portugal has over 35 public universities and polytechnic institutes regulated by the Agencia de Avaliacao e Acreditacao do Ensino Superior (A3ES). All use the 0 to 20 numeric scale and issue ECTS Diploma Supplements. Portuguese degrees are recognised across the European Higher Education Area and evaluated by WES for North American applications. The directory below lists the top public and private universities in Portugal; for any of these institutions, use the calculator above with your specific course grades and ECTS credits.

Major Portuguese universities with location, type, and academic strengths
UniversityCityTypeKnown For
University of Lisbon (ULisboa) Lisbon Public Sciences, Medicine, Law, Humanities, Engineering
University of Porto (UP) Porto Public Engineering, Sciences, Economics, Medicine, Arts
University of Coimbra (UC) Coimbra Public Law, Medicine, Humanities, Sciences (est. 1290)
NOVA University Lisbon Lisbon Public Economics, Sciences, Social Sciences, Law
University of Minho Braga / Guimaraes Public Engineering, Sciences, Education, Arts
University of Aveiro Aveiro Public Engineering, Sciences, Business, Education
ISCTE University Institute Lisbon Lisbon Public Business, Social Sciences, Public Policy
Tecnico Lisboa (IST) Lisbon Public Engineering, Architecture, Applied Sciences
Catholic University of Portugal Lisbon / Porto Private Business, Law, Humanities, Theology
University of Madeira Funchal Public Sciences, Education, Tourism

What Counts as a Good GPA at a Portuguese University

On the Portuguese 0-20 scale, academic standing thresholds follow a consistent pattern across most universities. These cutoffs apply uniformly at the University of Lisbon, the University of Porto, the University of Coimbra, NOVA University Lisbon, and most other public and private institutions, with minor variations at the faculty level.

  • Muito Bom com Distincao (18+): Exceptional academic achievement. Reserved for the top fraction of one percent. Typically earned only in mestrado dissertation defence or doutoramento viva voce examinations; very rarely seen as a final licenciatura media. Equivalent to US summa cum laude / 4.0.
  • Muito Bom (16+): Very Good distinction. Competitive for graduate scholarships (FCT, Fulbright, Gulbenkian), Erasmus Mundus, and competitive master programmes at top European universities. Equivalent to roughly a US 3.0 to 4.0 / cum laude.
  • Bom (14+): Good standing. Qualifies for most master programmes at Portuguese universities and is competitive for Erasmus exchanges. Equivalent to roughly a US 2.5 to 3.0 / B grade range.
  • Minimum graduation media: 10/20 is the firm passing threshold for any individual course at every Portuguese university. Some faculties (notably Medicine, Architecture, and Engineering) set a higher progression threshold (12 or 13/20 cumulative) for advancement to later years.
  • Graduate school admission floor: 12 to 14/20 is the typical mestrado entry minimum, with competitive programmes setting 14 or higher. Doutoramento programmes typically require 16/20 (Muito Bom) in the mestrado or licenciatura plus research output.

Scholarships and Funding for Portuguese and International Students

High-achieving students at Portuguese universities have access to several major funding programmes. Each has specific media thresholds that map directly to the 0-20 scale categories above.

  • Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT): The national research foundation awards doctoral and postdoctoral scholarships for research at Portuguese institutions. The standard doctoral grant covers four years of funding (a stipend plus tuition); it generally requires a mestrado media of 16 or above (Muito Bom). FCT also funds research positions for postdocs and integrated researchers at Portuguese universities and research centres.
  • Erasmus+ programme: Supports student exchanges at universities across the European Higher Education Area. Portuguese students with a media of 14 or above (Bom) are competitive for partner institution placements; for the most competitive exchanges (TU Munich, ETH Zurich, Sciences Po, KU Leuven) a media of 16 or above is usually required.
  • Gulbenkian Foundation (Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian): Offers internal merit grants at partner institutions and funds Portuguese students abroad. The Gulbenkian programme for international postgraduate study typically requires a licenciatura media of 16 or above plus a strong research statement.
  • Fulbright Portugal Commission: Supports Portuguese students for graduate study in the United States. Fulbright Portugal generally requires a media of 16 or above for competitive consideration, alongside TOEFL or IELTS English proficiency, GRE / GMAT scores for relevant fields, and a strong research or study proposal.
  • Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters: European Commission funded master programmes jointly hosted by consortia of European universities. Portuguese applicants are typically required to hold a media of 16 to 17 (Muito Bom) for the most competitive consortia.

Portuguese vs French, Italian, and Belgian Grading Scales

Portugal, France, Belgium, and Italy all sit within the European Higher Education Area and all use ECTS credits, but each preserves a distinct national grading scale. Portuguese 0-20 grades do not convert one-to-one with French 0-20 grades because the distinction labels and the modal grade differ.

Portuguese 0-20 scale compared with neighbouring continental European grading systems
CountryScalePassing minimumHighest distinction labelApprox. US 4.0 for top tier
Portugal0 to 2010 / 20Muito Bom com Distincao (18+)4.0
France0 to 2010 / 20Tres Bien (16+)4.0
Belgium0 to 2010 / 20Plus Grande Distinction (17+)4.0
Italy18 to 3018 / 3030 e lode (Honours, 30+)4.0
Spain0 to 105 / 10Matricula de Honor (9.0+)4.0
Germany1.0 to 5.0 (inverse)4.0 / 5.01.0 (Sehr Gut)4.0

Two practical implications follow. First, a Portuguese student transferring an academic record into a French university cannot simply remap the numeric value: a Portuguese 14 (Bom) does not equate to a French 14 (Bien) because the French scale concentrates the modal student in the 11 to 13 range and treats 14 as comparatively strong, while in Portugal the modal student grade is also in that band but the distinction labels differ. Second, the ECTS letter grade is the cleanest cross-country comparison metric on Bologna-compliant transcripts; a Portuguese student with an ECTS B grade is directly comparable to a German student with an ECTS B grade regardless of the underlying numeric scale.

High School Routes into Portuguese Universities

Portuguese high school students enter university through the Concurso Nacional de Acesso, the national university admissions competition run by the Direcao-Geral do Ensino Superior. Admission is based on the secondary school media (calculated on the 0-20 scale across the three years of secondary education, 10th through 12th grade) and the national entrance examinations (Exames Nacionais). Each university programme publishes a minimum admission media (nota minima de candidatura), typically between 9.5 and 18.0 out of 20 depending on programme competitiveness. Medicine and Veterinary Sciences at the University of Lisbon, University of Porto, and University of Coimbra consistently require an admission media above 17 or 18; Architecture and Engineering at Tecnico Lisboa typically require 16 or above; Business and Social Sciences at NOVA and ISCTE require 14 to 16 depending on intake year.

International high school graduates (IGCSE, International Baccalaureate, French Baccalaureat, German Abitur) apply through a parallel international quota at most Portuguese universities. The DGES publishes conversion tables that map foreign high school grades to the Portuguese 0-20 scale; an IGCSE A star, an IB grade of 7, and a French Baccalaureat with mention Tres Bien each typically convert to 18 to 20 on the Portuguese scale. Once accepted, all students use the calculator workflow above for the cumulative university media regardless of their high school origin.

Last verified: 2026-05-25. This Portugal GPA calculator estimates your media on the Portuguese 0-20 numeric scale using the credit-weighted average formula documented above and converts that media to a US 4.0 GPA using the piecewise band map applied by World Education Services (WES) and Educational Credential Evaluators (ECE). Universities apply institution-specific rules for supplementary assessments (exame de recurso), credit transfers, mestrado dissertation defence, and progression decisions; always verify against your faculty regulations and your university registrar. For US graduate school applications, see the US GPA calculator and consult World Education Services (WES) for the canonical credential evaluation report. Sources: Direcao-Geral do Ensino Superior (DGES) Portuguese higher education framework; NARIC Portugal grade conversion documentation; World Education Services Portugal grade conversion table; ENIC-NARIC Bologna Process documentation; Universidade de Lisboa and Universidade do Porto registrar grading policies.

How to calculate GPA from a 20 scale?
How to calculate GPA from a 20 scale: Portuguese universities (and most continental European institutions) use the 0 to 20 numeric scale where 10 out of 20 is the firm passing minimum. To compute your media (credit-weighted average), multiply each course grade by its ECTS credit value, sum the products across all completed courses, and divide by the total ECTS credits. The formula is Media = Sum(Grade x ECTS Credits) / Sum(ECTS Credits). For example, a student with three courses of 6 ECTS each scored 15, 14, and 16 out of 20 has Media = (15 x 6 + 14 x 6 + 16 x 6) / (6 + 6 + 6) = 270 / 18 = 15.0. That 15.0 maps to a Bom (Good) classification and approximately a 2.75 US GPA. The calculator above runs this math live and shows the US 4.0 equivalent for graduate school applicants.
What GPA scale do Portuguese universities use?
Portuguese universities use a 0 to 20 numeric grading scale under the framework of the Direcao-Geral do Ensino Superior (DGES) and the Ministerio da Ciencia, Tecnologia e Ensino Superior. The minimum passing grade is 10 out of 20. Distinction tiers are: Reprovado (Fail, below 10), Suficiente (Sufficient, 10 to 13), Bom (Good, 14 to 15), Muito Bom (Very Good, 16 to 17), and Muito Bom com Distincao (Excellent with Distinction, 18 to 20). All public universities including the University of Lisbon, University of Porto, University of Coimbra, NOVA University Lisbon, and University of Minho apply the same scale. Portugal joined the Bologna Process in 1999, so transcripts also include ECTS credits and an ECTS letter grade alongside the numeric 0-20 score.
What is a good GPA at a Portuguese university?
A good GPA at a Portuguese university is a media of 14 or above (Bom / Good). A 14 to 15 sits in the upper third of the typical undergraduate cohort and is competitive for master programme admission at the University of Lisbon, the University of Porto, and most public universities. A 16 or above (Muito Bom / Very Good) is excellent and equivalent to a distinction or cum laude recognition; this tier is competitive for graduate scholarships such as Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) doctoral grants and Fulbright Portugal. Grades above 18 (Muito Bom com Distincao) are exceptionally rare and indicate outstanding academic performance, often paired with research output. Portuguese grading is rigorous by European standards; only about 5 to 10 percent of students finish a licenciatura with a media above 16.
How do I convert my Portuguese GPA to a US 4.0 scale?
Portuguese grades on the 0 to 20 scale convert to the US 4.0 scale using a piecewise band map. The conversion most US graduate programmes and credential evaluators (WES, ECE, Scholaro) apply for Portuguese transcripts: 18 to 20 maps to a 4.0 US GPA, 16 to 17.99 maps to approximately 3.0 to 4.0, 14 to 15.99 maps to approximately 2.5 to 3.0, 10 to 13.99 maps to 1.0 to 2.5, and below 10 is a fail (0.0 US GPA). For example, a Portuguese media of 15.0 maps to roughly a 2.75 US GPA; a 17.0 maps to roughly a 3.5; a 19.0 maps to 4.0. The calculator above shows the US 4.0 equivalent live as you enter your courses. For formal US graduate school applications, World Education Services (WES) generates the authoritative course-by-course US GPA report from your Portuguese transcript.
How do I calculate my GPA for European universities (ECTS GPA calculator)?
How to calculate your GPA Europe-wide: the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) standardises credit values but each country preserves its own numeric grading scale. In Portugal the scale is 0 to 20; in France it is also 0 to 20 but with different distinction cutoffs; in Italy it is 18 to 30; in Germany it is 1.0 to 5.0 (inverse, where 1.0 is best); in the Netherlands it is 1 to 10. The ECTS letter grade (A, B, C, D, E for pass; FX, F for fail) provides cross-country comparison: in Portugal, ECTS A corresponds to roughly 18 to 20 (top 10 percent), B to 15 to 17 (next 25 percent), C to 13 to 14 (next 30 percent), D to 11 to 12 (next 25 percent), E to 10 (lowest passing 10 percent). The Portugal GPA calculator above reports both the 0-20 media and the equivalent ECTS letter so you can compare against transcripts from other Bologna Process countries.
What grade average is required for Portuguese graduate programs (mestrado)?
Portuguese master programs (mestrado) generally require a minimum licenciatura media of 12 to 14 out of 20, depending on the faculty and programme competitiveness. The University of Lisbon and the University of Porto require a minimum of 13 or 14 for most master programmes in engineering, sciences, and business. The Catholic University of Portugal sets 14 as a default minimum. Doctoral programs (doutoramento) typically require Muito Bom (16 or above) plus research output or a strong mestrado dissertation defence. Erasmus Mundus scholarships frequently require a minimum of 16 to 17 for Portuguese applicants. Fulbright Portugal requires an average of 16 or above for competitive consideration, alongside English proficiency (TOEFL or IELTS) and a strong research proposal. The FCT doctoral grant calls require a minimum mestrado media of 16.
How does the Portuguese 0-20 scale differ from France, Italy, and Belgium?
Portugal, France, and Belgium all use a 0-20 numeric scale, but the distinction labels and the modal grade differ. In Portugal, 10 is the passing minimum and the distinction tiers are Suficiente (10-13), Bom (14-15), Muito Bom (16-17), Muito Bom com Distincao (18-20); the modal student grade is in the 12 to 14 range. France uses the same 0-20 scale and 10 minimum but labels the tiers Passable (10-11), Assez Bien (12-13), Bien (14-15), Tres Bien (16+); French distinctions are stricter and a 16 in France is rarer than in Portugal. Belgium uses a 50-percent passing threshold expressed as 10/20 and labels distinctions Satisfaction (50-65), Distinction (65-75), Grande Distinction (75-85), Plus Grande Distinction (85+). Italy uses a separate 18-30 scale (not 0-20) with 18 as the passing minimum and 30 with honours (30 e lode) as the highest grade. The Portugal GPA calculator above is specific to the Portuguese label conventions and band cutoffs; do not apply French or Belgian thresholds to a Portuguese transcript.