Skip to content

SSLC Grade Calculator: Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu Marks

Calculate your SSLC grade for Kerala, Karnataka, or Tamil Nadu Class 10 results. Enter subject marks to get the CGPA, letter grade, and aggregate percentage with state-board scale.

Kerala SSLC Grade Calculator

Pick the state board, enter marks per subject out of 100, and read the live grade, CGPA (Kerala) or aggregate marks (Karnataka, Tamil Nadu), and percentage. The grading scale and percentage formula switch with the selected board.

Subject Marks (out of 100) Grade Points
CGPA 0.00 / 10.0
Aggregate Percentage: 0.0%
Subjects 0
Passed 0 / 0
Top Grade -
SSLC Grade Reference (live scale for selected board)
Marks Range Grade Grade Points Description

Scale refreshes when you switch state-board mode. Sources: Kerala Pareeksha Bhavan, Karnataka KSEEB, and Tamil Nadu Directorate of Government Examinations. Last verified: 2026-05-26.

How the SSLC Grade Is Calculated Across Indian Boards

SSLC stands for Secondary School Leaving Certificate, the Class 10 board examination issued by Indian state boards. Three of the largest state boards (Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu) each publish their own grading scale, passing threshold, and percentage-conversion formula. The SSLC grade calculator above models all three so a student can compare results consistently or check what the same marksheet would look like under a different state's grading rules.

Kerala SSLC is the most CGPA-oriented of the three: the Pareeksha Bhavan awards letter grades A+ through E and publishes a single CGPA on the marksheet. Karnataka KSEEB and Tamil Nadu DGE both lean on aggregate marks and class divisions (Distinction, First Class, Second Class, Third Class) rather than a unified CGPA value. The calculator routes between these patterns when the state-board mode changes.

Kerala SSLC CGPA to Percentage Formula
Percentage = CGPA x 9.5 1
Where:
  • CGPA = (Sum of grade points across all subjects) / (Number of subjects)
  • Grade points = Kerala SSLC 10-point scale: A+ = 10, A = 9, B+ = 8, B = 7, C+ = 6, C = 5, D+ = 4, D = 3, E = 0
  • Multiplier 9.5 is the Kerala Pareeksha Bhavan official conversion factor (not 10)
Example: A Kerala SSLC student earns A+ (10) in English, A (9) in Mathematics, A+ (10) in Science, B+ (8) in Social Science, A (9) in Hindi, and A+ (10) in Malayalam. Sum of grade points = 10 + 9 + 10 + 8 + 9 + 10 = 56. CGPA = 56 / 6 = 9.33. Percentage = 9.33 x 9.5 = 88.7%.

Kerala SSLC Grading System

The Kerala SSLC grading system is administered by the Pareeksha Bhavan under the Department of General Education. The grading scale is a nine-tier letter framework that maps marks (out of 100) to grade points on a 10-point CGPA scale. The Kerala system awards a grade for every subject plus a single overall CGPA aggregate.

Kerala SSLC grading scale with marks ranges, letter grades, grade points, and performance labels
Marks Range Grade Grade Points Performance Plus One Stream Notes
90 to 100A+10OutstandingTop science (Biology/Computer) at government schools
80 to 89A9ExcellentMost science streams at reputed schools
70 to 79B+8Very GoodCommerce with Computer Applications; mid-tier science
60 to 69B7GoodRegular commerce; humanities at top schools
50 to 59C+6Above AverageHumanities; vocational higher secondary
40 to 49C5AverageVocational; limited humanities
30 to 39D+4Needs ImprovementSupplementary examination recommended
20 to 29D3Marginal PassPlus One admission depends on remaining subject grades
Below 20E0FailSAY examination required before Plus One eligibility

The Kerala 9.5 Multiplier Explained

The 9.5 multiplier in the Kerala CGPA-to-percentage formula reflects the midpoint of the highest grade band rather than a flat 10 percent per grade point. The A+ band covers marks 90 to 100, so the band midpoint is 95. Multiplying CGPA by 9.5 (the band midpoint divided by 10) gives the expected aggregate percentage for a student whose marks sit at the centre of each grade band. The 10x estimate that some private agencies use inflates the result slightly because it assumes every A+ student scored exactly 100, which is rare. Kerala universities, scholarship boards, and the Directorate of Higher Secondary Education use the 9.5 formula on all transcripts.

Karnataka SSLC (KSEEB) Grading System

The Karnataka SSLC examination is administered by the Karnataka School Examination and Assessment Board (KSEEB, previously known as the Karnataka Secondary Education Examination Board). The Karnataka pattern examines six subjects under the Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation (CCE) framework, with each subject scored out of 100. The aggregate is reported out of 625 in language-heavy streams and out of 600 in the standard pattern.

Karnataka SSLC KSEEB grading scale with percentage bands, letter grades, and class divisions
Percentage Band Grade Class Division Plus Two Stream Notes
85 to 100A+DistinctionScience (PCMB), Computer Science
70 to 84AFirst ClassScience (PCMC), Commerce
55 to 69B+Second ClassCommerce; humanities
40 to 54BThird ClassHumanities; basic vocational
35 to 39C+PassVocational only
Below 35CFailSupplementary required

KSEEB uses 35 as the per-subject pass mark and 35 percent aggregate as the overall pass threshold. A candidate who fails in up to two subjects can appear for the supplementary examination held in June and again in October each year. The Karnataka result printout does not include a CGPA value; institutions reference the percentage band and class division directly. The calculator above models the KSEEB scale and reports the aggregate percentage and class division when Karnataka mode is selected.

Tamil Nadu SSLC Grading System

Tamil Nadu SSLC is administered by the Directorate of Government Examinations (DGE) under the State Board of School Examinations. The Tamil Nadu pattern examines five subjects, each out of 100, for an aggregate out of 500. The DGE uses an eight-tier percentage-band letter system (A1 through E) and reports the aggregate percentage rather than a CGPA. The minimum pass mark per subject is 35 (raised from 33 in 2019), and a candidate must pass all five subjects to qualify for Plus Two admission.

Tamil Nadu SSLC DGE grading scale with percentage bands, letter grades, and grade points
Percentage Band Grade Grade Points Performance Plus Two Stream Notes
91 to 100A110DistinctionTop group 1 (Biology/Math); top schools
81 to 90A29First ClassGroup 1 and Computer Science streams
71 to 80B18High SecondGroup 2 (Commerce with CS); humanities top schools
61 to 70B27Second ClassCommerce regular; humanities
51 to 60C16Third ClassHumanities; vocational
41 to 50C25PassVocational higher secondary
35 to 40D4Minimum PassLimited stream options
Below 35E0FailSupplementary examination required

SSLC State Board Comparison at a Glance

Students moving between states (a common Kerala-to-Karnataka or Karnataka-to-Tamil-Nadu transfer) need to understand how the three boards line up. The table below summarises the structural differences that matter most for transcripts and Plus Two admission.

SSLC comparison: Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu state boards
Attribute Kerala SSLC Karnataka SSLC (KSEEB) Tamil Nadu SSLC (DGE)
Number of subjects6 (incl. 3 languages)6 (incl. 3 languages)5 (incl. 2 languages)
Total maximum marks600625 or 600500
Grade scaleA+ to E (9 tiers)A+ to C (6 tiers)A1 to E (8 tiers)
CGPA reported?Yes (10-point)NoNo
Pass mark per subject20 marks (D grade)35 marks35 marks
CGPA-to-percentage formulaCGPA x 9.5n/a (use aggregate)n/a (use aggregate)
Supplementary exam nameSAY (Save A Year)SupplementarySupplementary
Examination authorityPareeksha BhavanKSEEBDGE Tamil Nadu
Plus One/Two rankingCGPA based (CAP)Aggregate marksAggregate marks

How to Calculate SSLC Percentage Step by Step

Working out an SSLC aggregate percentage by hand is straightforward once you know which formula applies for your state board. Follow these steps using the calculator above or replicate them on paper.

  1. Identify your state board. Check the marksheet header. Kerala marksheets carry the Pareeksha Bhavan seal; Karnataka marksheets carry the KSEEB seal; Tamil Nadu marksheets carry the DGE Tamil Nadu seal.
  2. List the subject marks separately. Most state SSLC marksheets show marks out of 100 per subject. Kerala lists six subjects with three languages; Karnataka lists six with three languages; Tamil Nadu lists five with two languages.
  3. For Kerala, convert marks to grade points first. Apply the Kerala 9-tier scale: 90 to 100 = 10 points, 80 to 89 = 9, and so on. Sum the grade points and divide by 6 (number of subjects) to get the CGPA.
  4. For Kerala, multiply CGPA by 9.5 for the percentage. A CGPA of 9.33 yields 88.7%. This is the official Pareeksha Bhavan conversion used on transcripts.
  5. For Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, sum the raw marks. Add the marks across all subjects (out of 600 in Karnataka, 500 in Tamil Nadu), divide by the maximum, and multiply by 100 to get the aggregate percentage.
  6. Cross-check the pass threshold. Kerala requires a minimum of D (20 marks) per subject; Karnataka and Tamil Nadu require 35. A single failed subject blocks the Plus One/Two admission until the supplementary or SAY result is published.

Plus One Stream Cutoffs by State and SSLC Grade

SSLC results gate Plus One (or Plus Two, depending on terminology) stream selection. Each state uses different cutoffs based on supply and demand in the local higher secondary system. The table below shows typical science, commerce, and humanities cutoffs at top-tier and mid-tier schools across the three boards.

Typical Plus One stream cutoffs by SSLC state board and school tier
Stream Kerala (CGPA) Karnataka (% aggregate) Tamil Nadu (% aggregate)
Science (Biology) top tier9.0 to 9.5+85 to 9585 to 95
Science (Biology) mid tier8.0 to 9.075 to 8575 to 85
Science (Computer) top tier8.5 to 9.5+80 to 9580 to 95
Commerce (with CS)7.5 to 8.565 to 8065 to 80
Commerce (regular)7.0 to 8.055 to 7055 to 70
Humanities / Arts6.0 to 7.545 to 6545 to 65
Vocational Higher Secondary5.5 to 7.040 to 5540 to 55

SSLC Supplementary and SAY Examinations

Students who fail in one or more SSLC subjects in the main examination can re-attempt those subjects through a state-administered supplementary examination, usually within two to three months of the main result. Kerala calls this the SAY (Save A Year) examination, held in June or July; Karnataka and Tamil Nadu use the term "Supplementary" and conduct one round in June (Karnataka also runs an October round). Passing the supplementary examination allows the student to proceed to Plus One or Plus Two admission without losing the academic year.

The supplementary marksheet is issued separately from the main result. For Plus One admission ranking, the higher of the two attempts is used: a student who scored D in Mathematics in the main exam and B+ in the supplementary uses the B+ grade for CGPA calculation and CAP allotment. The original D grade remains on the transcript with a notation indicating the supplementary improvement.

Common Mistakes When Calculating SSLC Grades

  • Applying the wrong percentage formula across states. Kerala uses CGPA x 9.5; Karnataka and Tamil Nadu use total marks divided by total maximum. Mixing the two understates or overstates the percentage by several points.
  • Confusing the Kerala D grade with a fail. Kerala D (20 to 29 marks) is a marginal pass with 3 grade points. The actual fail grade in Kerala is E (below 20). In Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, a fail is anything below 35.
  • Counting elective subjects in CGPA. The Kerala SSLC CGPA is computed across the six core subjects only. Elective performance is reported separately and does not enter the main CGPA.
  • Using CBSE Class 10 grade points for state SSLC. CBSE uses A1 through E2 with different grade points (10 to 2). Mapping CBSE grades onto the Kerala A+ to E scale produces incorrect CGPA values.
  • Treating supplementary marks as additive. Supplementary or SAY marks replace the failed subject grade; they do not add to the main exam aggregate. The replacement happens at the higher of the two scores.

Accuracy and Source Notes

The grading scales and percentage formulas on this page follow the Kerala Pareeksha Bhavan published SSLC grading framework (keralapareekshabhavan.in), the Karnataka KSEEB SSLC handbook (sslc.karnataka.gov.in), and the Directorate of Government Examinations Tamil Nadu rule book (dge.tn.gov.in). Plus One stream cutoffs reference the 2024 and 2025 admission notices from the Kerala Directorate of Higher Secondary Education, Karnataka Department of Pre-University Education, and Tamil Nadu Directorate of Higher Secondary Education. Cutoffs change year over year based on applicant pool and seat availability. Always verify the current cutoff on the relevant department's notice before relying on this calculator for admission planning. Values produced here are estimates for self-assessment; the official SSLC grade is the one printed on the state-board-issued marksheet. Last verified: 2026-05-26.

How is the SSLC CGPA calculated in Kerala?
The Kerala SSLC CGPA is the simple average of grade points earned across all six subjects on the Kerala Board of Public Examinations marksheet. Each subject's marks (out of 100) convert to a letter grade and a grade point on a 10-point scale: A+ (90 to 100) earns 10 grade points, A (80 to 89) earns 9, B+ (70 to 79) earns 8, B (60 to 69) earns 7, C+ (50 to 59) earns 6, C (40 to 49) earns 5, D+ (30 to 39) earns 4, D (20 to 29) earns 3, and E (below 20) earns 0 and is failing. The CGPA formula is the sum of grade points divided by the number of subjects. The official Kerala Pareeksha Bhavan conversion to percentage multiplies the CGPA by 9.5, so a CGPA of 10 corresponds to 95 percent and a CGPA of 8.0 corresponds to 76 percent.
How does Karnataka SSLC grading differ from Kerala SSLC?
Karnataka SSLC is administered by the Karnataka School Examination and Assessment Board (KSEEB) and reports aggregate marks out of 625 or 600 (depending on language paper structure) rather than a CGPA value. The KSEEB grading system uses six classes: A+ (Distinction) at 85 percent and above, A (First Class) at 70 to 84, B+ (Second Class) at 55 to 69, B (Third Class) at 40 to 54, C+ (Pass) at 35 to 39, and Fail below 35. Kerala SSLC, in contrast, publishes a single CGPA value alongside the per-subject grade, and the minimum passing grade in Kerala is C (40 marks, 5 grade points). Tamil Nadu adds a third pattern: percentage bands A1 through E without a CGPA aggregate, with 35 as the per-subject pass threshold.
How do I convert SSLC CGPA to percentage?
The official Kerala SSLC CGPA-to-percentage formula published by the Kerala Pareeksha Bhavan is Percentage = CGPA x 9.5. Under this formula a CGPA of 10 equals 95 percent, a CGPA of 9 equals 85.5 percent, a CGPA of 8 equals 76 percent, and a CGPA of 7 equals 66.5 percent. Some institutions use the simpler CGPA x 10 estimate, which slightly overstates the percentage at the high end. For Karnataka and Tamil Nadu SSLC the calculator reports the raw percentage directly (total marks divided by total maximum, multiplied by 100) since neither board issues a CGPA. The result panel above shows both the official x 9.5 conversion and the raw aggregate when Kerala mode is selected.
What is the minimum passing grade in SSLC across Indian state boards?
The minimum passing mark varies by state board. Kerala SSLC requires a D grade (20 marks, 3 grade points) per subject to pass that subject, although the practical passing threshold for higher secondary admission is C (40 marks) in compulsory subjects. Karnataka SSLC requires 35 marks per subject and 35 marks aggregate; students below 35 in any subject face the supplementary examination. Tamil Nadu SSLC requires 35 marks per subject under the current DGE pattern (since 2019; the older 33 percent threshold was raised). Andhra Pradesh and Telangana SSC boards use a 35 mark threshold. CBSE Class 10 (an alternative to state SSLC) requires 33 percent per subject and 33 percent aggregate.
How does the supplementary or SAY examination work for SSLC?
Students who fail in one or more SSLC subjects can appear for a supplementary examination (called SAY, Save A Year, in Kerala; Supplementary in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu) held within two to three months of the main result. SAY in Kerala covers the subjects in which the student scored D+ or below and is administered by the Pareeksha Bhavan in June or July; passing SAY allows the student to proceed to Plus One admission without losing the academic year. Karnataka KSEEB conducts supplementary examinations twice (June and October) for failed subjects. Tamil Nadu DGE conducts one supplementary examination in June. In all three boards the supplementary marksheet is issued separately and the higher of the two marks is used for higher secondary admission ranking.
How is the SSLC result used for Plus One or Class 11 admission?
Each state board uses its SSLC result differently for higher secondary (Plus One / Class 11) admission. Kerala runs the Centralised Admission Process (CAP) through the Directorate of Higher Secondary Education, ranking applicants by CGPA: science streams at high-demand government schools typically require CGPA 8.5 and above, commerce streams require around 7.5, and humanities require around 6.0. Karnataka and Tamil Nadu admit Plus Two (Class 11) students through individual school admissions based on aggregate marks; science streams require around 70 to 80 percent aggregate, commerce around 60 percent, and humanities around 50 percent. The cutoffs vary year over year based on applicant pool and seat availability.
Are CBSE Class 10 grading and SSLC grading the same?
No, although both apply to Class 10 students and use 10-point grade-point systems, they differ in detail. CBSE Class 10 uses nine grades (A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2, D, E1, E2) with grade points 10 to 2 and a passing threshold of 33 percent per subject. State SSLC boards each set their own scale: Kerala uses A+ through E with grade points 10 to 0 and a 20-mark minimum; Karnataka KSEEB uses A+ through Fail with class labels (Distinction, First, Second, Third Class) and a 35-mark minimum; Tamil Nadu DGE uses A1 through E. The CGPA is calculated for CBSE Class 10 (sum of grade points divided by number of subjects) and for Kerala SSLC, but not for Karnataka or Tamil Nadu where aggregate marks are reported directly. The calculator above models all three state SSLC variants; CBSE Class 10 students should use the CBSE-specific calculator.