GWA to Percentage Calculator
Common Conversion Examples 1.00 99% 1.25 96% 1.50 93% 1.75 90% 2.00 87% 2.50 81% 3.00 75% What…
| Course Name | Grade | Units | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
You’ve finished several semesters. Now you need the bigger picture not just how you did last term, but how you’re doing overall. Your cumulative GWA is the number that decides Latin honors, scholarship renewal, and your official academic standing at graduation. A single semester GWA doesn’t tell you that. This calculator does.
Enter your GWA and total units for each semester (or every subject individually), and this tool computes your true overall cumulative GWA using the correct weighted formula the same method used by CHED-accredited Philippine universities.
Cumulative GWA sometimes abbreviated as CGWA, and also called Overall GWA or, at some universities, CGPA is your General Weighted Average across every semester you’ve completed, from your first term to your most recent one not just one semester.
It is not the same as your semester GWA. Your semester GWA tells you how you performed in one term. Your cumulative GWA tells you how you’ve performed across your entire academic program so far, and it’s the number your university actually uses to decide Latin honors, Dean’s List standing over multiple terms, and scholarship retention at renewal time.
| Aspect | Semester GWA | Cumulative GWA |
|---|---|---|
| Time period | One term only | Every term completed so far |
| Subjects included | Subjects from that semester | All subjects from all semesters |
| Used for | That term’s Dean’s List | Latin honors, graduation standing, scholarship renewal |
| Changes | Resets each term | Carries forward permanently |
| Formula | Σ(Grade × Units) ÷ Σ(Units) for one term | Σ(Grade × Units) ÷ Σ(Units) across all terms |
Cumulative GWA = Σ(Semester GWA × Semester Units) ÷ Σ(Semester Units)
Written in full, across n semesters:
Cumulative GWA = (GWA₁ × Units₁ + GWA₂ × Units₂ + … + GWAₙ × Unitsₙ) ÷ (Units₁ + Units₂ + … + Unitsₙ)
The same result also comes from combining every individual subject you’ve ever taken — multiply each subject’s grade by its units, add all of them together, then divide by your total units across your entire academic history. Both methods give the same answer; the semester-by-semester version is just faster.
| Variable | Definition |
|---|---|
| Semester GWA | The weighted average grade for one completed semester |
| Semester Units | Total credit units enrolled in that semester |
| Semester GWA × Units | The weighted quality points contributed by that semester |
| Σ (Semester GWA × Units) | Sum of weighted quality points across all semesters |
| Σ Units | Total units across your entire academic history |
| Cumulative GWA | Your final overall weighted average |
A student has completed three semesters:
| Semester | GWA | Units | GWA × Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1, Sem 1 | 1.50 | 12 | 18.00 |
| Year 1, Sem 2 | 2.25 | 24 | 54.00 |
| Year 2, Sem 1 | 1.75 | 21 | 36.75 |
| Total | — | 57 | 108.75 |
Cumulative GWA = 108.75 ÷ 57 = 1.91
A common mistake is averaging semester GWAs directly, without accounting for units. Using the same three semesters above:
Simple average (incorrect): (1.50 + 2.25 + 1.75) ÷ 3 = 1.83
Weighted cumulative (correct): 1.91
The gap exists because the student’s weakest semester (2.25) was also their heaviest 24 units, versus 12 and 21 units in the other two terms. Simple averaging treats all three semesters as equally important, which understates how much that heavy, low-performing semester actually pulled down the overall standing. The result is a cumulative GWA that looks better than it really is which can be misleading when you’re checking honors or scholarship eligibility. Always weight by units, never average semester GWAs directly.
Method 1 Subject-by-subject (most accurate): Enter every subject you’ve taken across every semester, with its grade and units. Click “+ Add Course” for each one, then click Calculate. This gives the most precise result since it works from your raw grades directly.
Method 2 Semester-by-semester (faster): Enter each completed semester as a single row, using that semester’s GWA as the grade and that semester’s total units as the units. Click “+ Add Course” for each additional semester, then click Calculate. This is faster and only slightly less precise than Method 1.
Graduating students checking whether their final cumulative GWA meets their university’s Latin honors cutoff before their last semester.
Honors-track students who want to monitor cumulative standing every term rather than waiting until graduation to find out.
Transferee students combining credited units from a previous school with units earned at their current university.
Scholarship renewal applicants confirming their cumulative GWA still meets DOST-SEI, CHED, or private scholarship retention requirements.
Students recovering from a weak first year who need to know exactly how much improvement in later semesters is required to reach their target.
| Semester | GWA | Units | GWA × Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sem 1 | 1.60 | 18 | 28.80 |
| Sem 2 | 1.55 | 21 | 32.55 |
| Sem 3 | 1.65 | 21 | 34.65 |
| Sem 4 | 1.58 | 18 | 28.44 |
| Total | — | 78 | 124.44 |
Cumulative GWA = 124.44 ÷ 78 = 1.60
Result: A steady 1.60 across four semesters keeps this student comfortably within the Cum Laude range (1.46–1.75), with room to spare even if a future semester dips slightly.
| Semester | GWA | Units | GWA × Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Y1 Sem 1 | 2.75 | 18 | 49.50 |
| Y1 Sem 2 | 2.50 | 18 | 45.00 |
| Y2 Sem 1 | 1.50 | 21 | 31.50 |
| Y2 Sem 2 | 1.25 | 21 | 26.25 |
| Total | — | 78 | 152.25 |
Cumulative GWA = 152.25 ÷ 78 = 1.95
Result: Even though this student’s last two semesters (1.50 and 1.25) are excellent, the weak first year still pulls the cumulative to 1.95 outside the Cum Laude range. This is the most important thing to understand about cumulative GWA: early semesters carry the same mathematical weight as later ones. Recovery is possible, but it takes sustained strong performance over more semesters than it took to create the deficit, not just one or two good terms.
| Semester | GWA | Units | GWA × Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sem 1 | 1.50 | 21 | 31.50 |
| Sem 2 (includes one 5.00) | 2.20 | 21 | 46.20 |
| Sem 3 | 1.45 | 21 | 30.45 |
| Sem 4 | 1.40 | 21 | 29.40 |
| Total | — | 84 | 137.55 |
Cumulative GWA = 137.55 ÷ 84 = 1.64
Result: A cumulative GWA of 1.64 falls numerically within the Cum Laude range (1.46–1.75). But at most Philippine universities, a single failing grade (5.00) anywhere in the degree program permanently disqualifies a student from Latin honors — regardless of what the cumulative GWA number ends up being. This is the detail students most often miss: the disqualification is a separate rule from the GWA calculation itself, and a good-looking cumulative number does not override it. Always confirm your specific university’s policy with the registrar.
If you know your current cumulative GWA and want to reach a specific target by graduation, use this reverse formula:
Required average GWA for remaining semesters = [Target GWA × (Units completed + Units remaining) (Current Cumulative GWA × Units completed)] ÷ Units remaining
Worked example:
A student has completed 5 semesters with a cumulative GWA of 1.90 across 105 units. They have 3 semesters left, estimated at 63 units, and want to graduate Cum Laude (target: 1.75).
This student needs to average 1.50 across their remaining three semesters to graduate Cum Laude. This calculation tells you exactly how demanding or achievable your target actually is, instead of guessing.
| Factor | Effect | Action to Take |
|---|---|---|
| Semester unit load | Heavier semesters carry more weight in the final result | Track which semesters had the most units, not just the best grades |
| Early academic performance | Carries equal mathematical weight to later semesters and can’t be “overwritten” | Treat every semester, especially the first, as equally important |
| A single failing grade (5.00) | Often causes permanent Latin honors disqualification regardless of resulting GWA | Avoid failing at all costs; withdraw (DRP) before the deadline if a subject is at risk |
| Transferee/credited units | Some universities include prior-school credited units in cumulative GWA, others don’t | Confirm with your registrar before including them |
| Retaking failed subjects | The retake grade may or may not replace the original in cumulative computation, depending on school policy | Check your university’s specific retake policy |
| Rounding | Rounding at each semester before combining can distort the final result | Apply rounding only at the final cumulative result, not at each step |
| Latin Honor | Standard Cumulative GWA Cutoff |
|---|---|
| Summa Cum Laude | 1.00 – 1.20 |
| Magna Cum Laude | 1.21 – 1.45 |
| Cum Laude | 1.46 – 1.75 |
| No Honors | 1.76 and above |
Exact cutoffs vary by university — always verify with your registrar’s office.
| University | System Notes |
|---|---|
| UP | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale. University Scholar status at ≤1.45, College Scholar at ≤1.75 cumulative GWA per semester recognition. |
| UST | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale. Some honors/Dean’s List conditions also require no individual subject grade below 2.00. |
| PUP | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale, CHED-aligned weighted formula. |
| DLSU | Uses an ascending 0.0–4.0 CGPA scale, opposite direction from the standard scale — requires separate conversion. |
| Ateneo | Uses a QPI (Quality Point Index) system rather than the standard 1.00–5.00 GWA. |
| FEU | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale. |
| Mapúa | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale. |
| NU | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale. |
| STI | Standard 1.00–5.00 scale. |
Grading policies change and vary by campus and program. Always confirm current cutoffs and computation rules with your own registrar this table is for general orientation only.
| Scholarship Program | Typical Minimum Cumulative GWA |
|---|---|
| DOST-SEI Scholarship | 2.00 or lower (numerically), maintained each semester |
| CHED Study Now Pay Later | Varies by institution, typically 2.50 or lower |
| Most university merit scholarships | 1.75 or lower |
| Private/corporate scholarships | 2.00–2.50, depending on the provider |
Always confirm current requirements directly from your scholarship provider’s contract.
Yes. Cumulative GWA includes every semester from first year onward, weighted equally by units alongside later semesters. A weak first year lowers your cumulative average and stays factored in through graduation, even after strong recovery.
Since cumulative GWA weights every semester equally, recovery requires sustained strong performance across enough future semesters usually more terms than it took to create the deficit especially in heavy-unit semesters, since those carry more mathematical influence.
Yes, in most Philippine universities, your cumulative GWA at the end of your final semester is your graduation GWA the number used for Latin honors and your official transcript.
INC (Incomplete) grades are not included in GWA computation until resolved. Once resolved with a numerical grade, they’re included in the cumulative calculation for the period in which they were completed.
Yes, at most Philippine universities. A single 5.00 anywhere in your academic program typically disqualifies you from Latin honors permanently, regardless of your resulting cumulative GWA number.
Not directly. DLSU uses an ascending 0.0–4.0 scale and Ateneo uses a QPI system both require different computation logic than the standard 1.00–5.00 scale this calculator uses. Use the GWA to GPA Calculator or your registrar’s official conversion instead.
They measure the same underlying concept overall academic performance across a full program but CGPA (used by DLSU) and QPI (used by Ateneo) use different numeric scales and formulas than the standard Philippine 1.00–5.00 GWA.
It depends on the university. Some universities include credited units and grades from a previous school in the cumulative computation; others compute cumulative GWA only from units earned at the current institution. Confirm with your registrar.
No. This is the most common calculation error. You must weight each semester’s GWA by its units before combining see the Simple Average vs. Weighted comparison above for why this matters.
Use the Target Cumulative GWA formula above: it calculates the exact average GWA you need across your remaining semesters to hit a specific cumulative target, based on your current standing and remaining units.
The conversion uses the same GWA to-percentage equivalency mapping as a single semester your cumulative GWA is just the GWA value being converted. Use the GWA to Percentage Calculator and enter your cumulative GWA result from this page.
Senior High School students who receive numerical grades on the 1.00–5.00 scale can use this same calculator and formula, combining Grade 11 and Grade 12 semesters the same way college students combine their semesters. Schools using DepEd’s 100-point grading system should first convert grades to the 1.00–5.00 scale using their school’s transmutation table before entering them here.
No. All calculations run locally in your browser. Your grades and units are not transmitted to or stored on any server, and the data disappears once you close or refresh the page.
Philippine GWA doesn’t use letter grades directly, but for international applications a cumulative GWA of 1.00–1.25 is roughly equivalent to an A/A+, 1.50–1.75 to a B+/A-, and 2.00–2.50 to a B/B+ on the US letter grade scale. Use the GWA to GPA Calculator for a precise numeric conversion letter-grade equivalents vary by institution and should be confirmed with the receiving school.
This Cumulative GWA Calculator was developed to give Filipino students an accurate, transparent way to compute their overall academic standing across multiple semesters, using the standard CHED aligned weighted average formula. Grade scale data, honors thresholds, and scholarship requirements referenced on this page are based on official CHED publications, DOST-SEI scholarship guidelines, and publicly available registrar policies of major Philippine universities.
All calculations are performed locally in your browser. No grade data is transmitted or stored.
If you identify an inaccuracy or a university specific rule not reflected in this tool, contact us through the website. We update content regularly based on institutional policy changes.
Common Conversion Examples 1.00 99% 1.25 96% 1.50 93% 1.75 90% 2.00 87% 2.50 81% 3.00 75% What…
You finished your subjects. Now you need to know exactly where you stand — whether you qualify for…
Convert your GWA Convert Philippine General Weighted Average (GWA) into the US 4.0 GPA scale. GWA (1.00 –…