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GWA Calculator

Course Name Grade Units Action
GWA: 0.00
Total Units: 0
Status: Not Qualified

You finished your subjects. Now you need to know exactly where you stand — whether you qualify for Dean’s List, whether your scholarship is safe, or whether you are on track for Latin honors. Manual computation using the GWA formula takes time and one wrong multiplication ruins the result.

This free GWA Calculator gives you your Grade Weighted Average in seconds. Enter your subjects, final grades, and credit units. The calculator applies the standard Philippine weighted average formula and displays your GWA, total units, and academic standing instantly. No account required. No data stored. Works on any device.

What Is GWA (Grade Weighted Average)?

GWA stands for General Weighted Average. It is the standard academic performance metric used by colleges and universities across the Philippines, mandated by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) as the basis for honors recognition, scholarship eligibility, and academic standing.

Unlike a simple average that treats all subjects equally, GWA assigns more influence to subjects with higher credit units. A 5-unit subject affects your GWA five times more than a 1-unit subject. This weighted approach reflects the actual academic workload and importance of each course within your program.

GWA operates on a descending numerical scale from 1.00 to 5.00. On this scale, 1.00 is the highest achievable grade, equivalent to 96–100 percent performance. A grade of 5.00 is a failing mark. The minimum passing grade at most Philippine universities is 3.00, equivalent to approximately 75 percent.

Important note for international readers: The Philippine GWA scale runs in the opposite direction from the US GPA scale. A GWA of 1.75 is excellent — it qualifies for Cum Laude honors. A GWA of 3.75 is near-failing. Always clarify the scale direction when using your GWA in international applications.

Philippine GWA Grading Scale Reference

Numerical GradePercentage EquivalentDescriptionLatin Honors Range
1.0096–100%ExcellentSumma Cum Laude
1.2593–95%SuperiorSumma / Magna Cum Laude
1.5090–92%Very GoodMagna Cum Laude
1.7587–89%GoodCum Laude (standard cutoff)
2.0084–86%SatisfactoryAbove passing
2.2581–83%Above AveragePassing
2.5078–80%AveragePassing
2.7576–77%Barely PassingPassing
3.0075%Passing (minimum)Minimum pass
5.00Below 75%FailingDisqualified from honors

Note: Percentage equivalents follow the standard mapping used by most Philippine universities. Exact ranges vary by institution. Always verify with your registrar.

How This GWA Calculator Works — Formula, Variables, and Logic

The GWA Formula

The calculator uses the standard General Weighted Average formula recognized by CHED and applied uniformly by Philippine higher education institutions:

GWA = Σ (Grade × Units) ÷ Σ Units

Written in full:

GWA = (Grade₁ × Units₁ + Grade₂ × Units₂ + Grade₃ × Units₃ + … + Gradeₙ × Unitsₙ) ÷ (Units₁ + Units₂ + Units₃ + … + Unitsₙ)

Formula Variables Explained

VariableDefinition
GradeThe final numerical grade received in a subject (e.g., 1.75, 2.00, 3.00)
UnitsThe credit units assigned to that subject (e.g., 1, 2, 3, 5)
Grade × UnitsThe weighted quality points contributed by one subject
Σ (Grade × Units)Sum of all weighted quality points across all subjects
Σ UnitsTotal number of credit units enrolled
GWAThe final weighted average result on the 1.00–5.00 scale

Worked Calculation Example

A student enrolled in five subjects in one semester:

SubjectFinal GradeCredit UnitsGrade × Units
Mathematics1.7535.25
English2.0036.00
Natural Science1.5046.00
Filipino2.2536.75
Physical Education1.0022.00
Total1526.00

GWA = 26.00 ÷ 15 = 1.73

At a GWA of 1.73, this student qualifies for Cum Laude recognition and Dean’s List consideration at most Philippine universities (standard threshold: 1.75 or lower).

Calculator Assumptions and Limitations

This calculator assumes the standard Philippine 1.00–5.00 descending grading scale. It applies the standard CHED-aligned GWA formula without university-specific modifications. The following conditions apply:

  • Grades entered must fall within the 0.00 to 5.00 range.
  • Credit units must be greater than zero.
  • Incomplete (INC) and Dropped (DRP) grades are not included in the calculation. Including them would produce an inaccurate result.
  • NSTP (National Service Training Program) units are excluded at most Philippine universities and should not be entered in this calculator unless your school’s registrar explicitly includes them in GWA computation.
  • This calculator uses the standard scale. For university-specific rules (DLSU’s 0.0–4.0 ascending scale, PISAY’s 70–100 percentage scale), use the dedicated university pages linked below.

How to Use the GWA Calculator

Step 1: Enter your subject name (optional) Type the name of each course in the Course Name field. This field is optional but helps you track which subjects you have entered.

Step 2: Enter your final grade Enter the numerical grade you received for that subject. Use your school’s official grade slip or transcript. Grades must be on the 1.00–5.00 scale. Do not enter percentage scores — use the grade equivalent table above to convert if needed.

Step 3: Enter credit units Enter the number of credit units assigned to that subject. This information appears on your class schedule or official school records.

Step 4: Add more subjects Click the “+ Add Course” button to add additional rows. Add one row for every subject you took in the semester.

Step 5: Calculate Click “Calculate GWA.” The result displays your GWA, total units, and Dean’s List status.

Step 6: Reset if needed Click “Reset” to clear all fields and start a new calculation.

Keyboard shortcut: Press Enter while typing in any number field to trigger the calculation.

Why Use This GWA Calculator Instead of Manual Computation

Manual GWA computation using pen, paper, or a basic phone calculator introduces multiplication errors, unit addition mistakes, and rounding inconsistencies. A single error in one subject’s weighted points changes your final GWA — which can mean the difference between qualifying and not qualifying for Dean’s List.

This calculator eliminates manual error by applying the exact formula automatically. It handles decimal grades (1.25, 1.75, 2.50), multi-digit unit values, and unlimited subjects in one calculation. Results are displayed to two decimal places, matching the precision used by Philippine registrar offices.

The tool is free, requires no account registration, stores no personal data, and works on mobile phones without an app download. It is available whenever you need it — after receiving your grade slip, before an academic advising session, or when planning which subjects to prioritize next semester.

Who Should Use This GWA Calculator

College students computing semester GWA Students who need to check their standing at the end of each semester before results are officially released. Useful for planning whether to appeal a grade or request a re-checking.

Students monitoring Dean’s List eligibility Students who need to confirm whether their current grades are sufficient to qualify for Dean’s Lister recognition before the academic term ends.

Students applying for scholarships CHED, DOST-SEI, and most private scholarship programs require a minimum GWA for renewal. Use this calculator after each semester to verify whether your GWA meets the retention requirement.

Students targeting Latin honors at graduation Students tracking their cumulative GWA across multiple semesters to determine whether they are on track for Cum Laude (GWA 1.75 or lower), Magna Cum Laude (1.45 or lower), or Summa Cum Laude (1.20 or lower) at most universities.

Senior high school students SHS students who receive numerical grades on the 1.00–5.00 scale can use this calculator to track their weighted average per term.

Parents monitoring their child’s academic performance Parents who receive report cards and want to verify the GWA computed by the school independently.

Real-World GWA Calculation Examples

Example 1 — First-Year Student, First Semester

A first-year BS Nursing student at a state university enrolls in 18 units and receives the following grades:

SubjectGradeUnitsGrade × Units
Anatomy and Physiology2.0048.00
Fundamentals of Nursing1.7547.00
Medical Terminology1.5034.50
Chemistry for Health Sciences2.2536.75
Communication Arts1.7523.50
Ethics1.2522.50
Total1832.25

GWA = 32.25 ÷ 18 = 1.79

Result: The student’s GWA is 1.79. This falls just above the standard Dean’s List threshold of 1.75. The student does not qualify for Dean’s List this semester. To qualify next semester, the student needs to improve at least one high-unit subject grade.

Example 2 — Third-Year Student Targeting Cum Laude

A third-year BS Accountancy student enrolled in 21 units:

SubjectGradeUnitsGrade × Units
Financial Accounting III1.5057.50
Management Accounting1.7547.00
Business Law2.0036.00
Taxation1.7547.00
Research Methods1.2533.75
PE 31.0022.00
Total2133.25

GWA = 33.25 ÷ 21 = 1.58

Result: GWA of 1.58 qualifies for Magna Cum Laude range (1.46–1.75 at most universities) and Dean’s List. The 5-unit Financial Accounting subject had the highest weight — the 1.50 grade contributed 7.50 quality points, the largest single contribution in the semester.

Example 3 — Student with a Failing Grade

A second-year student enrolled in 18 units with one failing subject:

SubjectGradeUnitsGrade × Units
Physics1.7535.25
Calculus II5.00420.00
Programming II1.5046.00
Data Structures2.0036.00
Technical Writing1.2522.50
PE 21.0022.00
Total1841.75

GWA = 41.75 ÷ 18 = 2.32

Result: The single failing grade (5.00) in the 4-unit Calculus II subject raised the GWA from approximately 1.57 to 2.32. The student is disqualified from Dean’s List and from Latin honors at graduation due to the 5.00 grade, regardless of future GWA performance. This illustrates why avoiding any failing grade is the highest academic priority.

Key Factors That Affect Your GWA Result

FactorHow It Affects GWAAction to Take
Credit units of each subjectHigher-unit subjects have greater weight. A 5-unit subject affects GWA five times more than a 1-unit subject.Prioritize study time on high-unit subjects.
Failing grade (5.00)A single 5.00 drastically lowers GWA and permanently disqualifies from Latin honors.Avoid failing at all costs. Withdraw (DRP) before the deadline if needed.
Incomplete (INC) gradeINC grades are not computed in GWA but block Dean’s List eligibility and must be resolved.Resolve INC grades before the next evaluation period.
Low grade in a high-unit subjectA 2.50 in a 5-unit major subject damages GWA more than a 2.50 in a 1-unit minor subject.Focus on major subjects; seek tutoring early in the semester.
Grade in a minor or elective subjectLow-unit subjects have minimal GWA impact.Do not neglect them, but do not over-invest time at the expense of major subjects.
Total units enrolledEnrolling in more units dilutes the effect of individual subject grades on the overall GWA.Maintain a balanced subject load per semester.
Transmutation policySome universities transmute raw scores before assigning the final numerical grade. GWA is computed from the transmuted grade, not the raw score.Check your university’s transmutation table.
NSTP inclusionSome universities exclude NSTP from GWA; others include it. Entering NSTP in this calculator when your school excludes it will produce an inaccurate result.Confirm with your registrar before including NSTP.

How to Interpret Your GWA Result

GWA and Dean’s List Qualification

The Dean’s List is awarded each semester to students who meet specific performance criteria in that term. Two conditions must be met simultaneously:

Condition 1 — GWA threshold: Your semestral GWA must be 1.75 or lower (better) at most Philippine universities. Some schools apply stricter thresholds (UST requires no individual subject grade lower than 2.00 in addition to the GWA requirement).

Condition 2 — No failing or incomplete grades: A single grade of 5.00 (Fail) or an unresolved INC in any subject during that semester disqualifies you from Dean’s List consideration, regardless of your GWA.

Semestral GWADean’s List Status at Most PH Universities
1.00 – 1.45Eligible (President’s Lister at some schools)
1.46 – 1.75Eligible for Dean’s List
1.76 – 3.00Not eligible for Dean’s List
Any semester with 5.00 or INCAutomatically disqualified

Note: Exact thresholds vary. UP uses University Scholar (GWA ≤ 1.45) and College Scholar (GWA ≤ 1.75). DLSU uses a GPA scale (threshold: 3.400+). Always verify with your school’s registrar.

GWA and Latin Honors at Graduation

Latin honors are determined by your cumulative GWA — the weighted average of every grade across your entire degree program, from first semester of first year through graduation.

Latin HonorStandard Cumulative GWA CutoffPercentage Equivalent
Summa Cum Laude1.00 – 1.2096–100%
Magna Cum Laude1.21 – 1.4593–95%
Cum Laude1.46 – 1.7587–89%
No Honors1.76 and aboveBelow 87%

Disqualification condition: One failing grade (5.00) in any subject during the entire degree program permanently removes eligibility for all Latin honors, even if the student recovers to an excellent cumulative GWA in subsequent semesters.

Note: Exact cutoffs differ by university. Some schools use 1.80 as the Cum Laude boundary. Verify with your registrar’s office.

GWA and Scholarship Retention Requirements

Scholarship ProgramMinimum GWA RequiredNotes
DOST-SEI Scholarship2.00 or lower per semesterNumerically 2.00 or lower means maintaining “Satisfactory” average
CHED Study Now Pay LaterVaries by institutionTypically 2.50 or lower
Most university merit scholarships1.75 or lowerRequires Dean’s List standing each semester
Private corporate scholarships2.00 – 2.50 depending on providerAlways confirm from scholarship contract

Frequently Asked Questions About GWA

What is the passing GWA in the Philippines?

The minimum passing GWA in the Philippines is not a single fixed number — it depends on your university’s academic retention policy. However, a final grade of 3.00 is the minimum passing mark in any individual subject at most Philippine colleges, equivalent to approximately 75 percent. A student who passes all subjects will have a GWA somewhere between 1.00 and 3.00. Academic retention policies differ: some universities place students on probation if their semestral GWA exceeds 2.50 or 3.00 consecutively. Check your student handbook for your specific school’s retention threshold.

What is a good GWA in the Philippines?

A GWA of 1.75 or lower is considered excellent and qualifies for Dean’s List recognition and Cum Laude standing at most Philippine universities. A GWA between 1.76 and 2.00 reflects solid academic performance and meets the retention requirement for most government scholarship programs (DOST-SEI requires 2.00 or lower). A GWA between 2.01 and 2.50 is passing and considered average. Anything above 2.50 is below the standard scholarship retention threshold. A GWA above 3.00 in any individual subject means that subject was failed.

How is GWA different from GPA?

GWA (General Weighted Average) is specific to the Philippine educational system and uses a descending scale where 1.00 is highest and 5.00 is failing. GPA (Grade Point Average) is used internationally, particularly in the United States, on an ascending scale where 4.00 is highest and 0.00 is failing. The two systems run in opposite directions and cannot be directly compared without a conversion formula. A Philippine GWA of 1.75 (excellent) would read as 1.75 out of 4.0 on a GPA scale — which foreign readers interpret as near-failing. For international applications, always convert and explain your scale. Use the GWA to GPA Calculator for an accurate conversion.

Does NSTP affect GWA?

At most major Philippine universities — including UP, PUP, and UST — NSTP (National Service Training Program) does not count toward GWA computation. NSTP is a graduation requirement but is graded Pass/Fail rather than on the 1.00–5.00 numerical scale, and most institutions exclude its units from GWA calculation. Some schools assign a numerical grade to NSTP and include it. The safest approach is to confirm with your registrar’s office whether NSTP units and grades are included in your GWA before entering them into any calculator.

What happens to GWA if I get an INC grade?

An Incomplete (INC) grade means you did not fully complete the course requirements for that subject within the academic term. INC grades are not included in GWA computation — they are treated as pending. However, an unresolved INC at the time of Dean’s List evaluation disqualifies you from that semester’s recognition, even if your overall GWA is strong enough. Once you complete the requirements and the INC is converted to a numerical grade, it is then included in GWA computation for the period in which it was resolved.

Does a failing grade (5.00) count in GWA calculation?

Yes. A failing grade of 5.00 is included in GWA computation and has a severe impact because it is the numerically worst grade on the scale. A 5.00 in a 4-unit subject contributes 20 quality points to the numerator of the GWA formula — more than a perfect grade of 1.00 in that same subject (which contributes 4 quality points). Beyond the GWA impact, a single 5.00 grade at any point during your degree program permanently disqualifies you from Latin honors at graduation at most Philippine universities.

How do I compute my cumulative GWA across multiple semesters?

Cumulative GWA is not calculated by averaging your individual semester GWAs. That method produces an incorrect result when semesters have different total unit loads. The correct method uses the same formula applied to all subjects across all semesters combined: add all quality points (Grade × Units) from every semester together, and divide by the total units from all semesters combined. Use the Cumulative GWA Calculator for a multi-semester calculation.

Can I use this calculator for DLSU grades?

DLSU (De La Salle University) uses an ascending scale from 0.0 to 4.0, where 4.0 is the highest grade — the opposite direction from the standard Philippine 1.00–5.00 scale. If you enter DLSU grades directly into this calculator, the result will be meaningless because the formula expects a descending scale. Use the dedicated DLSU GWA Calculator page which applies DLSU-specific grade scale logic.

What GWA do I need for a DOST scholarship?

The DOST-SEI scholarship requires scholars to maintain a GWA of 2.00 or lower (numerically) per semester to retain benefits. On the Philippine 1.00–5.00 scale, 2.00 corresponds to approximately 84–86 percent, described as Satisfactory performance. A GWA of 2.25 or above (numerically higher, meaning lower performance) causes the scholar to fall below the requirement. Always confirm the current retention threshold from your DOST-SEI scholarship contract, as specific conditions may vary.

Is this GWA calculator accurate for all Philippine universities?

This calculator accurately applies the standard GWA formula used by the majority of CHED-accredited Philippine universities on the 1.00–5.00 descending scale. It does not apply institution-specific rules such as DLSU’s 0.0–4.0 ascending scale, PISAY’s 70–100 percentage scale, or UST’s Dean’s List condition requiring no individual grade below 2.00. For university-specific accuracy, use the dedicated calculator pages for UP, UST, PUP, DLSU, FEU, Ateneo, Pisay, and BulSU. This calculator is a tool for estimation and academic planning — always confirm your official GWA with your registrar’s office.

About This Tool

This GWA Calculator was developed to give Filipino students a fast, accurate, and transparent way to compute their academic standing using the standard CHED-aligned formula. The calculation logic follows the General Weighted Average formula defined in CHED Memorandum Orders governing the grading systems of Philippine higher education institutions. Grade scale data, honors thresholds, and scholarship requirements cited on this page are sourced from 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.

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