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Nursing GPA Calculator for BSN and ADN Programs

Calculate your nursing school cumulative GPA and science prerequisite GPA on the 4.0 scale. Check eligibility for ADN, BSN, accelerated BSN, and graduate nursing programs.

Enter your courses, credits, and grades to calculate cumulative nursing GPA.
Course Credits Grade Remove
Courses 0
Credits 0 cr
Program Eligibility
Grade point reference (4.0 scale)
LetterPointsNursing Outlook
A+ / A4.0*Excellent, well above all program minimums
A-3.7Strong, competitive for top BSN programs
B+3.3Good, meets most BSN competitive ranges
B3.0Meets BSN minimum at most programs
B-2.7Below BSN competitive range; consider ADN
C+2.3Borderline; strengthens ADN applications
C2.0Minimum passing at most programs; retake if BSN is the goal
C-1.7Below minimum at most BSN programs
D+ / D / D-1.3 / 1.0 / 0.7Retake required for any competitive application
F0.0Failing; course retake required

* A+ = 4.0 at most US colleges; a minority award 4.3.

The Nursing GPA Formula

Nursing programs use the same credit-weighted GPA formula that every US college uses. What makes nursing GPA calculations distinct is that admissions offices often apply the formula twice: once across all your coursework for the cumulative GPA, and again using only the specific prerequisite courses for the science GPA. Both produce a number on the 4.0 scale, but the prerequisite GPA carries more weight in most program rankings.

Nursing GPA Formula
GPA = Sum of (Credits x Grade Points) for all courses Total credits attempted
Where:
  • Grade Points = numeric equivalent of each letter grade (A/A+ = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, B- = 2.7, C+ = 2.3, C = 2.0, D = 1.0, F = 0.0)
  • Credits = credit hours the course carries on your transcript
  • Quality Points = Grade Points x Credits for a single course
Example: Anatomy & Physiology I: A- (3.7) x 4cr = 14.8 QP. Microbiology: B+ (3.3) x 4cr = 13.2 QP. Statistics: B (3.0) x 3cr = 9.0 QP. Science GPA = (14.8 + 13.2 + 9.0) / (4 + 4 + 3) = 37.0 / 11 = 3.36.

Why the Science GPA Matters More Than Cumulative GPA

Nursing faculty track outcomes data carefully. Research published by nursing education bodies consistently shows that grades in Anatomy and Physiology, Microbiology, and Chemistry predict success in pharmacology, pathophysiology, and clinical practicum coursework more reliably than grades in electives or general education courses. A student with a 3.6 cumulative GPA but a 2.8 in the sciences may be less competitive than a student with a 3.2 cumulative and a 3.5 prerequisite GPA at many programs.

The prerequisite GPA also tends to reflect more recent academic performance than the cumulative GPA, since prerequisites are typically completed in the 18 to 36 months before application. Admissions reviewers weight recency. A strong upward trajectory in the sciences, even from a lower starting point, signals capacity for the rigorous nursing curriculum ahead.

Nursing Program GPA Requirements by Program Type

The three main RN pathways differ meaningfully in their GPA expectations. Understanding the thresholds before you apply saves time and helps you target programs where your profile is genuinely competitive.

GPA requirements across nursing program types for 2026 admissions
Program Type Minimum GPA Competitive GPA Length Notes
LPN Certificate 2.0 2.5+ 12 to 18 months Lowest threshold; stepping stone to RN via bridge programs
ADN (Associate Degree in Nursing) 2.5 3.0 to 3.2 2 years Community college pathway; seats are limited and competition can be high
BSN (Traditional 4-year) 3.0 3.2 to 3.5 4 years Science GPA cutoff often equals or exceeds cumulative GPA cutoff
ABSN (Accelerated BSN) 3.0 to 3.5 3.5 to 3.8 12 to 18 months Requires prior non-nursing bachelor's degree; highly selective cohorts
MSN Entry-Level (ELMSN) 3.0 3.5+ 3 years For career changers seeking graduate-level entry to nursing practice
MSN / Graduate nursing 3.0 to 3.2 3.5+ 2 years (post-BSN) NursingCAS calculates GPA independently from transcripts

Core Nursing Prerequisites and Their GPA Weight

Credit hours determine GPA weight. A 4-credit course with a lab contributes 33 percent more quality points than a 3-credit lecture course at the same letter grade. This is why performing well in the 4-credit science labs has an outsized effect on your nursing prerequisite GPA. The table below lists standard prerequisites with typical credits and GPA impact.

Common nursing prerequisites with credit hours and relative GPA weight
Course Typical Credits GPA Impact Notes
Anatomy and Physiology I 4 High Lab included; strongest predictor of nursing science performance
Anatomy and Physiology II 4 High Required separately at most programs; builds on A&P I
Microbiology 3 to 4 High Lab usually included; 4-credit version carries more GPA weight
General Chemistry 3 to 4 High Required by BSN and ABSN programs; sometimes waived for ADN
Statistics or College Math 3 Moderate Foundation for dosage calculation and evidence-based practice
English Composition 3 Moderate Required for clinical documentation; usually a general education requirement
Psychology (General) 3 Moderate Foundation for therapeutic communication in patient care
Nutrition 2 to 3 Low to Moderate Required by some programs; 2-credit versions carry less GPA weight
Developmental Psychology / Lifespan 3 Moderate Required by many ADN and some BSN programs

How Nursing Programs Calculate and Review GPA

The mechanics are straightforward: multiply each course's grade points by its credit hours, sum the products, and divide by total credits. Where programs differ significantly is in their policies around repeated courses and which attempt counts.

Grade Repeat Policies Vary Between Programs

Some programs, particularly competitive BSN programs at research universities, average both attempts at a prerequisite course. If you earned a C the first time and retook the course for a B, the GPA calculation uses the average of those two grades rather than the better one. Other programs, more commonly community colleges running ADN programs, apply grade replacement and use only the most recent grade. A handful include both grades in full. This policy matters a lot. Retaking a C for an A in a 4-credit A&P course can shift your prerequisite GPA by 0.2 to 0.4 points under grade replacement, but only by about 0.1 points under grade averaging.

Always check the specific repeat policy before registering for a retake. The University of Houston College of Nursing, for example, uses the most recent grade only. Minnesota State University Mankato averages both attempts. Confirm the policy directly with each program's admissions office before deciding whether a retake is worth the time and tuition.

NursingCAS GPA Calculation for Graduate Programs

Graduate nursing programs (MSN, DNP, CRNA, PMHNP) often use NursingCAS, the centralized application service operated by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. NursingCAS recalculates your GPA independently from uploaded transcripts rather than accepting the institutional figure. It uses the standard 4.0 scale and includes both attempts at repeated courses, not just the most recent grade. It also calculates multiple GPA types: overall, science, prerequisite, and nursing major GPA where applicable.

If you are applying to graduate nursing programs through NursingCAS and have retaken any course, enter both grades in the Science/Prerequisite tab above to see the approximate GPA NursingCAS will calculate. The difference between grade-replacement and grade-averaging often surprises applicants who assumed their improved grade fully replaced the earlier one.

TEAS Score as a GPA Complement

Most ADN and BSN programs require the ATI TEAS (Test of Essential Academic Skills) as a supplement to GPA. Programs typically publish a composite admissions ranking that weights GPA alongside TEAS score. At Minnesota State University Mankato, for example, the core GPA carries 50 percent of the ranking weight, TEAS carries 25 percent, and a group interview accounts for the remaining 25 percent. A TEAS composite in the 75 to 90 percent range can offset a borderline GPA. A GPA near or above 3.5 paired with a TEAS score above 80 percent places most applicants in a genuinely competitive position for traditional BSN admission.

How to calculate gpa in nursing school
To calculate your nursing GPA, multiply each course's grade points by its credit hours to get quality points (A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0, D = 1.0, F = 0.0, with plus and minus modifiers shifting by 0.3). Add the quality points for all courses, then divide by total credit hours. For example: an A- (3.7) in 4-credit Anatomy and Physiology plus a B+ (3.3) in 4-credit Microbiology produces (14.8 + 13.2) / 8 = 3.50. Nursing programs often calculate this separately for prerequisite courses only, producing your science GPA, which they weight more heavily than your overall GPA. The calculator above runs both calculations automatically.
What GPA do you need for nursing school?
GPA requirements vary by program type. ADN programs at community colleges typically accept applicants with a minimum 2.5 GPA, though the average admitted GPA at competitive programs sits closer to 3.0. Traditional BSN programs at four-year universities generally require a 3.0 minimum cumulative GPA, with competitive applicants averaging 3.2 to 3.5. Accelerated BSN programs, which require a prior bachelor's degree, typically want 3.5 or higher because cohorts are smaller and selection is more competitive. Graduate nursing programs (MSN, DNP) usually require 3.0 to 3.2, with selective programs preferring 3.5 or above. Many programs also publish separate science GPA minimums that are equal to or higher than the cumulative GPA cutoff.
Do nursing schools calculate GPA from prerequisites separately?
Yes. Most BSN and ABSN programs calculate a separate prerequisite or science GPA alongside the cumulative GPA. The prerequisite GPA uses the same credit-weighted formula but includes only the specific science and general education courses listed as program requirements, such as Anatomy and Physiology I and II, Microbiology, Chemistry, Statistics, and sometimes English Composition and Psychology. Nursing faculty use the science GPA because performance in biology and chemistry predicts success in pharmacology and pathophysiology coursework more reliably than grades in electives. Some programs weight the prerequisite GPA at 50 percent or more of the admissions ranking. Check the admission requirements page for each program you apply to, as the specific list of prerequisite courses varies by school.
How to calculate nursing GPA for NursingCAS applications
NursingCAS is the centralized application service for graduate nursing programs (MSN, DNP, CRNA). It calculates several GPA types from your uploaded transcripts: overall GPA, science GPA, and prerequisite GPA. NursingCAS uses a standard 4.0 scale and recalculates your GPA itself rather than accepting your institution's reported figure. Repeated courses are included in the NursingCAS GPA at both grades, not just the most recent attempt, which differs from how many undergraduate institutions handle repeats. You can preview your NursingCAS GPA by entering your courses in the Science/Prerequisite tab of this calculator using both grades for any repeated course.
What courses are counted in nursing prerequisite GPA?
The specific courses vary by program, but most nursing prerequisite lists include Anatomy and Physiology I and II (typically 4 credits each with lab), Microbiology with lab (3 to 4 credits), General Chemistry (3 to 4 credits), Statistics or College Math (3 credits), English Composition (3 credits), Psychology (3 credits), and often Nutrition (2 to 3 credits). Some programs add Developmental Psychology, Sociology, or a life sciences elective. The sciences, especially A&P and Microbiology, carry the most weight in the GPA calculation because they are 4-credit courses with lab components. A strong grade in a 4-credit science has about 33 percent more GPA impact than the same grade in a 3-credit lecture course.
Can I get into nursing school with a low GPA?
A GPA below 3.0 limits options but does not close them. ADN programs at community colleges are the most accessible RN pathway, with many accepting applicants who meet a 2.5 minimum in required prerequisite courses. LPN certificate programs have the lowest GPA thresholds and provide a clinical foundation for later LPN-to-RN bridge enrollment. If your GPA is borderline, retaking a prerequisite course to replace a weak grade can improve the prerequisite GPA calculation at schools that use grade replacement rather than grade averaging. A strong ATI TEAS score in the 75 to 90 percent range can also offset a borderline GPA at programs that combine GPA and TEAS scores in an admissions ranking formula. Gaining healthcare work experience as a CNA, phlebotomist, or EMT strengthens the application beyond GPA.

For the general college GPA calculation with prior GPA seed for cumulative projections, use the college GPA calculator. For the full credit-weighted GPA formula walkthrough and a grade-point reference table, see the GPA calculator. For tracking multiple semesters across an entire degree program, the cumulative GPA calculator handles term-by-term running totals.

Program GPA threshold data is sourced from the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) and publicly published admissions requirements from the University of Houston College of Nursing and Minnesota State University, Mankato School of Nursing. Individual program requirements vary. Always confirm current GPA cutoffs and prerequisite lists on each program's official admissions page before applying. Last verified: 2026-05-26.