Weighted Grade Calculator
Enter points earned and possible for each category, plus its weight, to get your weighted course total and letter.
How it works
Most syllabi split your grade into buckets — homework, quizzes, exams — each carrying its own slice of the total. This rolls all those buckets into one number the way your instructor actually computes it.
For every category, give the points you earned, the points available, and the weight it holds. Each row becomes a percentage on its own, then gets multiplied by its weight. So 180 of 200 on homework worth 20% and 270 of 300 on exams worth 50% each contribute in proportion to how much they count.
The whole thing recalculates live, and the weights don't need to sum to 100 — it divides by whatever you've entered. That makes it just as useful mid-semester, when only a couple of categories have grades in them yet.
Frequently asked questions
How is a weighted total different from averaging my scores?
Averaging pretends every category counts the same. A weighted total honors the split on your syllabus, so a strong exam average lifts your grade more than an equally strong homework average when exams carry more weight.
What if a category has no grades yet?
Leave it out or give it no points, and it simply won't factor in. The total divides by the weights you actually filled, so an incomplete semester still produces a realistic standing.
Can I enter raw points instead of percentages?
That's exactly what it expects. Put the points you earned and the points possible for each category, and it converts each one to a percentage before applying the weight.