Grading Scales Used in Schools — Complete Breakdown

Learn the most common grading systems worldwide, how percentages map to letter grades and GPA, and practical examples for teachers and students.

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Why grading scales matter

Grading scales determine how raw scores become meaningful feedback: percentages, letter grades, and grade point averages (GPA). Different countries, schools and institutions use different thresholds. This page collects the common systems and shows conversions and practical examples so you can apply them consistently.

1. Common Percentage → Letter Grade (U.S. style)

This is the most commonly used cutoffs in many schools (adjustable by institution):

Percentage Letter Grade Common Interpretation
90–100% A Excellent
80–89% B Good
70–79% C Satisfactory
60–69% D Passing (low)
0–59% F Fail

Note: Many schools use plus/minus variations (A-, B+, etc.) with narrower percentage bands (e.g. A = 93–100, A- = 90–92).

2. The 4.0 GPA Scale (U.S. universities & high schools)

Common mapping from letter grade to 4.0 GPA value:

Letter Grade Typical GPA Value Typical Percentage Range
A4.090–100%
A-3.790–92% (varies)
B+3.387–89%
B3.080–86%
B-2.780–82% (varies)
C+2.377–79%
C2.070–76%
D1.060–69%
F0.00–59%

Institutions may scale plus/minus values differently; always check the institution's grade policy for official conversions.

3. ECTS (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System)

ECTS uses letter steps A–F but with different meaning; common mapping examples:

ECTS Grade Local/Percentile Equivalent (example) Meaning
A90–100%Excellent
B80–89%Very good
C70–79%Good
D60–69%Satisfactory
E50–59%Pass
F0–49%Fail

ECTS conversion is often percentile-based and local universities publish conversion tables for their national systems.

4. Regional systems & common notes

United Kingdom

Undergraduate degree classifications (honours): First (≥70%), Upper Second (2:1, 60–69%), Lower Second (2:2, 50–59%), Third (40–49%). Many schools also report percentages per module.

India (CBSE / ISC / state boards)

Many boards report percentage. Passing thresholds vary (often 33% or 35%). Universities convert percentages into GPA or letter grades per their internal policy.

Pakistan

Schools and colleges typically use percentage marks; universities may convert into CGPA on a 4.0 or 5.0 scale depending on the institution.

Australia

Many universities use High Distinction (HD), Distinction (D), Credit (C), Pass (P), Fail (F). Percent bands vary but are published per university.

5. Practical conversion examples

Use these quick examples when grading or explaining results:

Example 1

Score: 5 / 9

Percentage: 55.56%

Estimate: C (≈55.56%)

Example 2

Score: 17 / 20

Percentage: 85%

Estimate: A (≈85%)

Example 3

Score: 33 / 40

Percentage: 82.5%

Estimate: A (≈82.5%)

Tip: Use our calculator for instant conversions and to test alternative cutoffs.

6. Quick cheat-sheet: Percent → Grade → GPA

Percent Letter GPA (approx) Descriptor
93–100A4.0Excellent
90–92A-3.7Very good
87–89B+3.3Good
80–86B3.0Above average
77–79C+2.3Average
70–76C2.0Pass
60–69D1.0Low pass
0–59F0.0Fail

Use this table as a starting point — always check the official grading policy for specific institutions.

7. Recommendations for teachers & administrators

  • Publish your scale: Make your grading cutoffs clear to students before assessments.
  • Consider plus/minus: Use plus/minus steps to differentiate high/low ends of letter grades.
  • Use consistent rounding: Decide whether to round percentage values and document the rule.
  • Provide examples: Publish sample conversions (e.g., 17/20 → 85% → B).
  • Keep accessibility in mind: Provide printable grade conversion charts and mobile-friendly pages.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Grading scales vary by country, state, and institution. Always check the official policy for accurate conversions.

Institutions publish their own mapping. Use the institution’s published table when available. The 4.0 table on this page is a common example.

No — plus/minus values (A-, B+) and their GPA equivalents are institution-specific.

Adapt the conversion table to your local scale. Our calculator can be used with any total/obtained score to produce percentages — then map to your defined grades.

Yes — clear rubrics and published grade cutoffs reduce disputes and improve transparency.

Yes — many admissions teams publish conversion guidelines. Use official university conversion charts or trusted credential evaluation services for high-stakes applications.

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