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High School GPA7 min readUpdated July 6, 2026

Weighted vs. Unweighted GPA for College Applications

Compare weighted and unweighted GPA, understand course rigor, and learn why colleges may recalculate transcripts.

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The Same Transcript Can Produce Two GPA Numbers

Unweighted GPA treats every class on the same scale. An A in regular English and an A in AP English are both worth 4.0 on a standard unweighted scale. Weighted GPA adds extra value for more rigorous classes, such as Honors, AP, IB, dual enrollment, or college-level courses.

Why Weighted GPA Exists

Weighted GPA tries to recognize academic challenge. Without weighting, a student who takes several advanced classes may look similar to a student who avoids advanced classes but earns the same letter grades. Weighting helps show that course selection matters.

Why Weighted GPA Is Hard to Compare

Schools use different policies. One high school may add 0.5 points for Honors and 1.0 point for AP. Another may cap weighted GPA. Another may report only unweighted GPA. Because of those differences, colleges may review course rigor separately or recalculate GPA using their own internal method.

Simple comparison

A student with four A grades in regular classes has a 4.0 unweighted GPA and a 4.0 weighted GPA. A student with four A grades in AP classes may still have a 4.0 unweighted GPA but a 5.0 weighted GPA if the school adds a full AP point.

How Admissions Readers May Think About It

Selective colleges rarely look at GPA alone. They usually consider grades in context: available courses, academic trend, subject strength, and rigor. A transcript with strong grades in demanding courses can be more persuasive than a perfect GPA built only from easier courses.

How to Use the Calculator

The High School GPA Calculator shows unweighted and weighted GPA together. Use the unweighted number to understand your baseline grade average. Use the weighted number to understand how course rigor changes the picture.