UMS Converter (Raw Marks and Uniform Mark Scale)
Anchor the A boundary for a more accurate two-segment conversion. Leave blank for a straight proportional map.
| Unit / Paper | UMS Mark |
|---|
UMS A-Level grade boundary reference (A* through E)
| Grade | UMS Percentage | 200 UMS | 400 UMS | 600 UMS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A* | 90% and above | 180 | 360 | 540 |
| A | 80% to 89% | 160 | 320 | 480 |
| B | 70% to 79% | 140 | 280 | 420 |
| C | 60% to 69% | 120 | 240 | 360 |
| D | 50% to 59% | 100 | 200 | 300 |
| E | 40% to 49% | 80 | 160 | 240 |
| U | Below 40% | Below 80 | Below 160 | Below 240 |
How the Uniform Mark Scale Standardises A-Level Results
UMS, the Uniform Mark Scale, is the score system that lets exam boards compare A-Level candidates fairly across different exam sessions. Raw paper marks change year on year as paper difficulty drifts. UMS rescales each candidate's raw mark against fixed percentage thresholds so that an A in one June series carries the same recognition as an A in another. The UMS calculator above turns either a single raw mark into UMS or a stack of unit UMS marks into a final A-Level grade.
UMS Calculator Inputs and What They Mean
The UMS grade calculator accepts two input shapes. Raw to UMS mode takes a single paper raw score, the published raw maximum, and an optional published raw mark at the A boundary, then returns the UMS value and the implied grade. UMS to Grade mode accepts UMS marks already awarded per unit and sums them. Choose the maximum UMS that matches your specification: most Cambridge International A-Levels max at 400 UMS over four units; legacy six-unit A-Levels in England maxed at 600 UMS; AS-Level taken as a standalone qualification is 200 UMS.
Edexcel UMS Converter and Other Awarding Bodies
Each awarding body publishes its own raw-to-UMS conversion table after the exam series. Edexcel UMS conversions are released on the Pearson qualifications site as a per-paper grade boundary document. AQA publishes a Uniform Marks leaflet that explains the same scheme. WJEC and CCEA publish similar conversion guides. The calculator above implements the standard UMS percentage scheme they all share (A* at 90%, A at 80%, B at 70%, and so on); enter the published raw mark at the A boundary to match a specific awarding-body table for your unit and paper.
Awarding Bodies That Still Use UMS in 2026
Not every UK awarding body still uses UMS. Reformed A-Levels in England (Ofqual, 2017 onwards) moved to a linear model where the full set of papers is taken at the end of two years and graded on raw aggregate marks; UMS does not apply. Cambridge International A-Levels (CAIE), WJEC in Wales, and CCEA in Northern Ireland still use UMS for their AS and A-Level qualifications. The table below maps the current position by awarding body.
| Awarding Body | Region | Uses UMS | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cambridge International (CAIE) | International | Yes | AS and A-Level papers report UMS per unit. |
| CCEA | Northern Ireland | Yes | Modular A-Levels retain UMS reporting. |
| WJEC / Eduqas | Wales | Yes | A-Level retains UMS for unit aggregation. |
| AQA | England | No (reformed) | Linear A-Level since 2017; UMS dropped. |
| Pearson Edexcel | England | No (reformed) | Linear since 2017; legacy Edexcel UMS converter applies only to pre-2017 specifications. |
| OCR | England | No (reformed) | Linear since 2017; UMS retained only for legacy specifications. |
UMS Grade Boundaries Against UCAS Tariff and US GPA
Once your UMS total converts to a letter grade, that grade carries through the wider UK and international admissions tariff. UCAS uses the letter grade to award tariff points; US credential evaluators (WES and similar) treat A* and A as roughly equivalent to a US 4.0 high school GPA. The table below summarises the cross-mappings so candidates submitting to multiple systems can read their UMS in the right currency.
| UMS Band | A-Level Grade | UCAS Points | US GPA Approx. | UK Degree Offer Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 90% and above | A* | 56 | 4.0 | Oxbridge, top Russell Group |
| 80% to 89% | A | 48 | 4.0 | Russell Group standard |
| 70% to 79% | B | 40 | 3.0 | Most Russell Group |
| 60% to 69% | C | 32 | 2.0 | Post-1992 and modern |
| 50% to 59% | D | 24 | 1.0 | Lower tariff entry |
| 40% to 49% | E | 16 | 0.0 | Foundation routes |
| Below 40% | U | 0 | 0.0 | Resit recommended |
Worked UMS Example, Cambridge International A-Level Mathematics
Suppose a Cambridge International A-Level Mathematics candidate sits four units. Each unit is marked out of 100 UMS, giving a 400 UMS total. The candidate scores 92, 81, 76, and 88 UMS across the four units. Adding the unit UMS marks gives 337 UMS out of 400, which is 84.25% of maximum UMS. That places the candidate in the A band (80% to 89% of max UMS), just under the A* threshold of 360. To raise the grade to A*, the candidate would need an additional 23 UMS, achievable through a resit on the lowest-scoring unit if the specification permits unit retakes.
What the Raw to UMS Map Does in This Example
Imagine the lowest-scoring unit returned 76 UMS from a raw mark of 58 out of 75, where the published raw mark at the A boundary was 56. The calculator's two-segment linear map sets raw 0 at 0 UMS, raw 56 at 80 UMS (the A boundary, 80% of 100 UMS max), and raw 75 at 100 UMS. The candidate's raw 58 sits two marks above the A boundary, so the mapped UMS is 80 + (2 / 19) x 20, which equals roughly 82 UMS. That is the figure the published conversion table would report for that paper.
UMS, Reformed A-Levels, and What Replaced It
The reformed linear A-Level introduced in England from 2017 onwards retired UMS reporting for AQA, Pearson Edexcel, and OCR. Under the linear system, candidates take all papers at the end of the course; the awarding body sets aggregate raw-mark boundaries for each grade per subject per session and grades are awarded against the aggregate. The Ofqual rationale was that UMS had become misleading at the unit level once papers within a specification drifted in difficulty. For candidates sitting Cambridge International, WJEC, or CCEA papers, UMS remains the official scale and the calculator above is the right tool. For candidates sitting reformed AQA, Edexcel, or OCR papers, refer to the A-Level grade calculator for UCAS tariff totalling from final letter grades, and the UK grade calculator for module and year weighting under undergraduate degrees.
Common Pitfalls When Reading UMS Conversion Tables
Three pitfalls show up regularly when candidates and parents read raw-to-UMS conversion tables for the first time. First, the A boundary is fixed at 80% of maximum UMS but the raw mark at the A boundary changes every series; reading last year's raw boundary as this year's is the most common error. Second, AS UMS and A-Level UMS do not stack the way some candidates expect under the linear English specifications; under those rules the AS UMS sits alongside, not inside, the full A-Level grade. Third, when a unit is retaken the higher UMS is normally banked but only within the cash-in window the awarding body sets; miss the window and the original UMS is the one that counts.
The calculator handles each pitfall directly. The maximum UMS selector forces an explicit choice between AS, A2, and full A-Level totals so AS and A-Level UMS are never silently aggregated. The optional A-boundary raw input lets a candidate enter the published series-specific raw boundary, so the two-segment linear map matches the official table for that paper instead of guessing a flat proportional curve. And the UMS to Grade mode accepts UMS per unit, which keeps the workflow consistent with how candidates actually receive results: unit by unit, then totalled at cash-in.
UMS Grade Calculator vs A-Level Grade Calculator
The UMS grade calculator on this page works in standardised marks; the A-Level grade calculator works in UCAS tariff points. If you already know your A-Level letter grade (because results day has happened), skip UMS and use the A-Level grade calculator to total UCAS points across subjects. If you have unit-level UMS marks before cash-in and want to know which grade band you are sitting in, the UMS calculator above is the right tool. For UK undergraduate degree classification (First, 2:1, 2:2, and so on) use the UK grade calculator, which handles module credits and year weighting.
Sources and Verification
UMS percentage thresholds (A* at 90%, A at 80%, B at 70%, C at 60%, D at 50%, E at 40%) are set out in the AQA Uniform Marks leaflet and the Pearson Edexcel guidance on converting marks, points, and grades. Reformed A-Level grading sits under Ofqual rules and uses raw aggregate boundaries instead of UMS. Cambridge International, WJEC, and CCEA continue to publish per-paper raw-to-UMS conversion tables after each exam series. Last verified: 2026-05-26.