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College GPA6 min readUpdated July 6, 2026

Do Pass/Fail, Withdrawals, and Incompletes Affect GPA?

Understand why P, NP, W, and I marks are often excluded from GPA, and what they can still affect.

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Not Every Transcript Mark Carries Grade Points

GPA is built from grade points. Letter grades such as A, B, C, D, and F usually carry grade point values. Transcript marks such as P, NP, W, and I often do not. That is why CalcMyGrades excludes those symbols from the GPA calculation unless your school publishes a different rule.

Common Meanings

  • P: Pass. Usually earns credit without grade points.
  • NP: No Pass. Often does not earn credit and may not add grade points.
  • W: Withdrawal. Usually appears on the transcript but does not count as a GPA grade.
  • I: Incomplete. Usually temporary until coursework is finished or a deadline passes.

Why These Marks Still Matter

Excluded from GPA does not mean unimportant. A withdrawal can affect completion pace. A no-pass mark can affect credits earned. An incomplete can turn into a letter grade if the remaining work is submitted, or into another grade if the deadline is missed. These rules are school-specific.

Before choosing Pass/Fail

Ask whether the course still counts toward your major, prerequisite chain, scholarship rules, graduate school preparation, or professional licensing path. A pass may protect GPA but fail to satisfy a separate requirement.

How to Enter These Marks

In CalcMyGrades, choose P, NP, W, or I when a course should appear in your planning list but should not add grade points. If your school treats one of those marks differently, use the official transcript rule instead of the default calculator assumption.

Best Use Case

Use the College GPA Calculator to compare two versions of the same term: one with a class taken for a letter grade and one with the class marked Pass/Fail. That comparison shows the GPA tradeoff clearly, but it should not replace policy advice from your advisor.

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