Enter the score earned, the points possible, and the category weight from your syllabus.
| Total Weight | ||||
Calculating Grades by Weight: Three Input Modes
This grade weight calculator (also called a grade calculator with weights) converts any input format to a category percentage and applies the same weighted average formula: Sum(Score x Weight) / Sum(Weights). In weighted grading, each category carries a specific percentage of the final grade. The three modes correspond to the three ways instructors record grades.
- Earned = points you scored on assignments in that category
- Possible = maximum points available in that category
- Weight = the percentage that category counts toward the final grade
- Letter Midpoint = standard band midpoint for each letter (A = 94.5%, B+ = 88%, C = 74.5%)
- Weight = the percentage that category counts toward the final grade
- Score = your current percentage in that category (0 to 100)
- Weight = the percentage that category counts toward your final grade
When category weights sum to exactly 100, the denominator equals 100 and the calculation is a standard percentage. When weights sum to less than 100 (mid-semester partial data) or more than 100 (extra-credit categories), the denominator adjusts automatically. This formula is consistent with academic record guidelines from AACRAO (the national association for collegiate registrars). The calculator uses the standard 10-point plus/minus scale; confirm exact letter grade cutoffs with your syllabus, since some instructors use a flat A/B/C/D scale without plus/minus grades.
How the Grade Weight Calculator Converts Your Input
The grade weight calculator runs the same weighted average formula across all three modes, but the conversion step differs per mode. Points mode divides score by possible points to get a percentage. Letter mode substitutes the standard band midpoint. Percentage mode passes the value through directly. After conversion, all three modes apply Sum(Score x Weight) / Sum(Weights) identically.
How to Find Your Weights from the Course Syllabus
Most instructors list the grading breakdown in the first few pages of the course syllabus under a heading like "Grading Policy," "Grade Distribution," or "Course Assessment." Look for a table or bulleted list that pairs each category with a percentage. A typical college course breakdown looks like this:
- Homework / Daily Work: 15 to 20%
- Quizzes: 10 to 15%
- Midterm Exam: 20 to 30%
- Final Exam: 25 to 40%
- Participation or Projects: 5 to 15%
If your syllabus doesn't list individual weights but uses a total-points approach instead, the grade calculator handles point-based input directly without a weight column. When you open a course in Canvas or Blackboard and see weighted categories in the gradebook, those percentages match exactly what goes in the Weight column of this calculator. Entering the wrong weight for a high-stakes category, such as a final exam worth 40%, can make your projected grade appear significantly off and affect how much you prepare before the exam.
Grades Calculator with Weights: What Each Column Means
In this grades calculator with weights, the Weight column holds the category percentage from your syllabus grading policy, not the number of assignments or total points available. If the syllabus says "Quizzes: 15%," enter 15. Category names are optional but help you match each row to your gradebook. The Score column format changes based on the input mode selected at the top.
Weight of Grades Reported as Points vs. Percentages
Instructors report the weight of grades differently depending on the course system. Canvas and Blackboard typically display weights as percentages. Some paper syllabi list weights as point allocations out of a total, such as 150 of 1,000 points. If your syllabus uses point totals, divide by the course total to find the percentage weight before entering it here.
Calculating Weighted Grades: A Step-by-Step Example
Suppose you are halfway through a semester using Percentage mode. Your syllabus has four categories and you have scores for the first three:
| Category | Score | Weight | Score x Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Homework | 94% | 20% | 1,880 |
| Quizzes | 88% | 15% | 1,320 |
| Midterm | 76% | 25% | 1,900 |
- Total weighted score: 5,100
- Total weight entered: 60% (Final Exam worth 40% is still pending)
The denominator is 60, not 100, because only three categories have scores. The calculator normalizes automatically and flags that 40% of the course weight is still ungraded. To find the score needed on the final exam to reach a target grade, use the final grade calculator.
Using a Grade Calculator with Weights Mid-Semester
When you open a grade calculator with weights before all categories are graded, enter only the rows with scores. Leave ungraded categories blank. The denominator adjusts to the sum of entered weights, so the result accurately reflects your standing on completed work. The weight tracker shows what percentage of the total course grade has been factored in.
Determining Weighted Grades When Weights Don't Sum to 100
Two common situations produce weight totals other than 100%:
- Mid-semester partial data. If you only have grades for some categories, the entered weights total less than 100. The calculator divides by the entered total, producing an accurate average for the completed portion of the course. The weight display turns gray and shows a note confirming the partial calculation.
- Extra-credit categories. Some instructors add a participation or bonus category on top of the standard 100%, allowing students to score above 100% overall. Enter the extra-credit row with its assigned weight. The weight display turns amber as a visual reminder. If you score well in the bonus category, your weighted average can exceed 100%.
If the weights in your syllabus don't sum to 100 even after all categories are entered, contact your instructor to confirm the grading policy. Some syllabi contain typos in the weight column.
Weighted Calculator for Grades With Extra Credit Categories
A weighted calculator for grades handles extra credit the same way as any other row: it divides by the actual total weight entered. A 5% bonus category with a perfect score raises the weighted average by less than 5 percentage points because the denominator grows too. The weight tracker turns amber to flag that entered weights exceed 100%.
Weight Percentage Calculator Check: Confirm Your Weights Sum Correctly
The weight tracker at the top of the calculator acts as a built-in weight percentage calculator check, summing all entered weights in real time. A finalized syllabus should sum to exactly 100%. If your total shows 95% or 110%, review each category for a typo or confirm with your instructor whether extra credit is intentionally included.
What Score Do I Need on the Final Exam?
After calculating your weighted average, the natural follow-up is: what score do I need on the remaining work to finish at a target grade? That calculation inverts the weighted average formula and is handled by the dedicated final grade calculator. Enter your current grade, your target final grade, and the weight of the remaining work to get the required score and a reachability assessment.
Grading Calculator with Weights for What-If Planning
Before your final exam, you can use this grading calculator with weights to run what-if scenarios. Enter hypothetical scores for the final exam row and the overall grade updates immediately. A 70% on a 40%-weighted final moves the overall grade far more than a 90% on a 10%-weighted quiz, so this approach helps you set a realistic study target before the exam.
Weighted vs. Unweighted Grading
Weighted Average Mark on Academic Transcripts
Some registrars include a weighted average mark on official transcripts alongside the letter grade and GPA. This figure is the same weighted percentage the calculator produces, expressed on a 0 to 100 scale. Graduate programs and international institutions often request this number when reviewing transfer applications, since it shows grade distribution across differently weighted courses.
Weight Average vs. Simple Class Average
A weight average applies different multipliers to each category before summing. A simple class average divides total earned points by total possible points equally. A 40% final exam and a 5% quiz carry equal weight in a simple average but very different impact in a weight average. Use this calculator when your syllabus assigns explicit category weights and use the unweighted grade calculator when every point counts equally regardless of assignment type.
In an unweighted course, every point is treated equally. A 10-point quiz and a 100-point exam both feed into the same points-earned-over-points-possible calculation. This approach works well when all assignments are similar in scope, but can skew the average when assignment sizes vary dramatically. The grade calculator handles unweighted grading in all three input modes: points, letter grades, and percentages, without a weight column.
Weighted grading lets the instructor define how much each category matters independently of how many assignments or total points it contains. A 5% participation category and a 45% final exam both enter the formula at their assigned weights, so the result matches what your instructor calculates by hand and what Canvas or Blackboard reports in the weighted total column. Once you have the weighted course grade, plug it into the GPA calculator to convert it to a 4.0-scale GPA. For grade reporting standards and letter grade scale conventions, College Board and your school's registrar page are the authoritative references for your institution's specific cutoffs.