📝 Free Calculator

Test Grade Calculator

Enter your score or mark each question right/wrong — get your percentage, letter grade, and GPA instantly.

Input Mode
Enter score above to see live result
Pts Missed
Need for A
Need for B
Need for C
Your Results
Your Grade on the Scale
What Score You Needed for Each Grade
Also Try
Standard Grading Scale
A+
97–100%
4.0
A
93–96%
4.0
A−
90–92%
3.7
B+
87–89%
3.3
B
83–86%
3.0
B−
80–82%
2.7
C+
77–79%
2.3
C
73–76%
2.0
C−
70–72%
1.7
D
60–69%
1.0
F
0–59%
0.0

Test Grade Calculator: Calculate Exam Scores and Grades

Got your test back and want to know your grade in seconds? This free test grade calculator converts any score into a percentage, letter grade, and GPA equivalent instantly. Enter your score and total, or switch to Question Mode to click each answer right or wrong — and see your grade update live. Works for quizzes, unit tests, midterms, finals, and any other graded exam.

A test grade calculator converts your raw test score — the number of points you earned out of the total possible — into a percentage and letter grade. It eliminates the need for mental math or a separate calculator, and gives you not just your grade but also your GPA equivalent, how many points you missed, and exactly what score you needed for every other grade level.

It answers the most immediate question every student has the moment a test gets handed back: “What did I get?” — and the second most common question: “What did I need to get an A?”

Score Mode — Use this when you have a total score:

Step 1: Enter the number of points you scored in the “Points Scored” field.

Step 2: Enter the total possible points in the “Total Points” field.

Step 3: Your percentage, letter grade, and GPA appear instantly — live, as you type.

Step 4: Click Calculate to unlock the full results — including the grading scale, what-if scenarios, compare tab, and multi-test tracker.

Question Mode — Use this when grading question by question:

Step 1: Set the total number of questions on the test.

Step 2: Click each question number — one click marks it correct (green ✓), a second click marks it wrong (red ✗), a third click clears it.

Step 3: Your score and percentage update live as you click. Click Calculate for the full breakdown.

Question Mode is ideal for self-grading practice tests, teachers grading papers one question at a time, or any situation where you’re working through answers individually rather than with a final total score.

Grade (%) = (Points Scored ÷ Total Points Possible) × 100

Three common test scoring scenarios:

Scenario 1 — Raw score out of total:
Scored 43 out of 50 → (43 ÷ 50) × 100 = 86% — B

Scenario 2 — Number of questions correct:
Got 17 right out of 25 → (17 ÷ 25) × 100 = 68% — D+

Scenario 3 — Wrong answers instead of right:
20 questions total, 4 wrong → Correct = 20 − 4 = 16 → (16 ÷ 20) × 100 = 80% — B−

All three scenarios work in this calculator. For Scenario 3, simply subtract wrong answers from total questions to get your correct answer count, then enter that as your score.

This calculator supports four grading scales — choose the one that matches your course or institution:

Standard (A = 90%+)
The most widely used scale across US colleges and high schools. A solid, balanced scale where 90%+ earns an A, 80–89% earns a B, and so on in 10-point bands.

Strict (A = 93%+)
Used by many competitive universities, AP courses, honors programs, and medical or law school prerequisites. Getting an A requires 93 or higher — meaning 91% is only an A−, not a full A.

Easy (A = 85%+)
Used by some community colleges and high schools where the professor adjusts the scale to reflect course difficulty. You can earn an A with 85% or above.

10-Point Scale
A simplified version where each letter covers exactly 10 percentage points: A = 90–100, B = 80–89, C = 70–79, D = 60–69, F = below 60. No plus or minus grades.

How to know which scale your professor uses: It will be listed in your course syllabus under the grading section. If it’s not there, email your professor and ask: “What percentage do I need for an A in this course?” That single answer tells you the entire scale.

Letter Grade Standard Strict GPA Points
A+ 97–100% 97–100% 4.0
A 93–96% 93–96% 4.0
A− 90–92% 90–92% 3.7
B+ 87–89% 87–89% 3.3
B 83–86% 83–86% 3.0
B− 80–82% 80–82% 2.7
C+ 77–79% 77–79% 2.3
C 73–76% 73–76% 2.0
C− 70–72% 70–72% 1.7
D 60–69% 60–69% 1.0
F Below 60% Below 60% 0.0

Want to know how your test results affect your academic standing? Our GPA Calculator can help you estimate your cumulative GPA based on your grades.

Passing grade thresholds vary by context — and confusing them is one of the most common mistakes students make:

High School (general courses): 60% (D) is passing in most US states. However, a D earns only 1.0 GPA points and may not satisfy prerequisites for the next course level.

College undergraduate (general courses): 60–65% is typically the minimum to pass and receive credit. However, many colleges require a C (70%) or above to apply a course toward your major requirements.

College undergraduate (major requirements): Most degree programs require a C (73%) or higher in core major courses. Getting a D in a prerequisite course often means retaking it before advancing.

Graduate programs: The standard for passing is usually a B (83%) or above. Some programs require a B+ (87%) in core courses. A C in a graduate course is often considered failing for program continuation purposes.

Scholarship maintenance: Many scholarships require you to maintain a minimum GPA — often 3.0 or higher. One low test grade that pulls your course grade below your scholarship threshold can have financial consequences beyond academics.

Always verify the specific passing threshold for your course in your syllabus. Never assume — and never find out too late. Not sure whether your score is enough to pass? Use our Passing Grade Calculator to find the minimum grade needed to meet your course or program requirements.

Use Score Mode when:

  • Your professor has returned your test with a number on it (e.g., “78/100” or “43/50”)
  • You’re calculating a grade based on total points accumulated across a test.
  • You want to quickly check what grade a specific score translates to

Use Question Mode when:

  • You’re self-grading a practice exam question by question.
  • You’re a teacher grading papers and want to mark each question individually.
  • You want to see in real time how each wrong answer affects your percentage.
  • You’re reviewing your answers after a test and want to find your score before the professor returns it.

Question Mode is particularly powerful for practice tests. As you grade each answer, the percentage updates live — so you can stop at any point and see exactly what your score would be with those results. This is far more useful than waiting until the end to calculate a total.

The What-If tab shows you exactly what score you needed on this test to achieve every grade level. This is useful in two specific situations:

After a disappointing grade: If you scored 71% on a midterm, the What-If tab instantly shows that you needed 73% for a C, 80% for a B−, and 90% for an A−. Knowing exactly how close you were gives you a realistic target for the next test — just 2 more points would have changed your grade.

Before a test, for mental preparation: Enter your total questions or points in advance and check the What-If tab to see what score maps to each letter grade. Going into a 50-question test knowing that 45 correct = A, 40 correct = B, and 35 correct = C gives you a concrete mental target while you’re taking the test.

The Multi-Test tab lets you save multiple test results and calculate your running average across all of them. This is most useful for courses where your final grade is based purely on test scores — for example, a course where you have 4 exams and each counts equally.

How to use it: Calculate each test as you receive it, then click “Add This Test.” After adding all tests, the tracker shows your average percentage, highest score, lowest score, and the letter grade your average corresponds to.

Students who track all tests this way never get surprised by a final course grade. You always know exactly where you stand — not just after the final, but after every single test.

This is a point of genuine confusion for many students — and it’s worth understanding clearly.

Your test grade is your performance on one specific exam. It’s a single data point.

Your course grade combines all your work — tests, quizzes, homework, labs, participation, and the final exam — usually with different weights assigned to each category. A single test grade feeds into your course grade but doesn’t determine it.

If your instructor uses category weights for exams, homework, quizzes, and participation, try our Weighted Grade Calculator to calculate your overall course grade more accurately.

What this means in practice: A 65% on a midterm that counts for 25% of your course grade only directly affects your final course grade by a fraction of that. If you had an 85% in the course before the midterm, the 65% on the midterm moves your course grade to approximately 80% — a drop, but not catastrophic.

Your test grade is just one piece of the puzzle. Use our Final Grade Calculator to determine the score you need on future exams, our Assignment Grade Calculator to track coursework performance, and our Semester Grade Calculator to calculate your overall semester grade. If you’d like a broader overview of your academic performance, try our Grade Calculator to calculate percentages, letter grades, and overall course results across multiple assessments.

Teachers who need faster score-to-grade conversions can also use our EZ Grader Calculator to generate grading scales for any number of questions.

Quick Method: Set total questions once, then grade each student’s paper by clicking through correct and wrong answers. The grade calculates automatically for each paper. Use the Grading History to track all students in sequence.

Curve calculation: If test scores came in lower than expected, this calculator helps model different curve methods:

Flat curve (add points to all scores): If the highest score was 82%, you might add 18 points to all scores. Enter each student’s curved score directly.

Square root curve: Multiply each student’s percentage by 10 and take the square root — this compresses the spread and benefits lower scorers more. A 64% becomes √(64×10) = √640 ≈ 80%.

Scale to highest score: Divide each student’s score by the highest score in the class, then multiply by 100. If the highest score was 88%, a student with 70% scores (70 ÷ 88) × 100 = 79.5% after the curve.

Subtract your wrong answers from the total questions to get your correct answer count. Then divide correct by total and multiply by 100. Example: 25 questions, 6 wrong = 19 correct → (19 ÷ 25) × 100 = 76% (C+). Or just use Question Mode in this calculator — click each answer and it calculates automatically.

Context determines this — a 75% in an easy elective is very different from a 75% in Organic Chemistry. As a general benchmark: 90%+ is excellent, 80–89% is good, 70–79% is average, 60–69% is below average but passing, below 60% is failing. The more important number is how your score compares to the class average, which your professor may share.

Use Score Mode. Enter your total earned points (including partial credit) and the total possible points. The calculator handles non-whole numbers perfectly — a score of 43.5 out of 50 is completely valid.

A 60% is a D on the standard scale — 1.0 GPA points. Depending on your course load, one D can meaningfully pull down your semester GPA. Use the Semester Grade Calculator to see the exact effect on your overall GPA.

This calculator works for any graded assessment — quiz, pop quiz, unit test, midterm, final, standardized test practice, or any other scored evaluation. The math is identical regardless of what the assessment is called.

Use Score Mode. Add up all the points you earned across every question (including different point values) for your total score. Enter that total against the maximum possible points. Example: 3-point question × 5 correct, 5-point question × 2 correct = 15 + 10 = 25 points earned out of, say, 40 possible = 62.5%.

For raw score percentage, yes. However, standardized tests use unique scaled scoring systems — a raw 76% on the SAT does not equal a 76 percentile score or a specific scaled score. For SAT, ACT, AP, GRE, or similar tests, use the official College Board or ACT score conversion charts after using this tool for raw percentage reference.

Conclusion

A test grade is more than just a number. It’s a quick snapshot of how well you understood the material on a specific exam. Whether you’re checking a quiz, unit test, midterm, or final exam, this Test Grade Calculator helps you instantly convert your score into a percentage, letter grade, and GPA equivalent without doing the math yourself.

Use your results to see where you stand, identify areas that need improvement, and set realistic goals for future tests. A single exam won’t always determine your final course grade, but understanding your performance early can help you make better study decisions and avoid surprises later in the semester. By tracking your test scores consistently, you’ll have a clearer picture of your academic progress and be better prepared for future exams.