American GPA to German GPA Converter
Convert a U.S. GPA to the German 1.0–5.0 grading scale using the modified Bavarian formula. Compare 4.0, 4.3, 5.0, custom GPA scales, letter grades, percentage grades, weighted course GPA, German-to-American reverse conversion, and batch grade conversion.
1. Enter GPA Details
Optional Letter / Percentage Inputs
Weighted Course GPA Builder
Enter one course per line as grade, credits. Example: 3.7, 3. The tool calculates the weighted GPA first, then converts it.
Batch Converter
2. Converted Result
This is a planning estimate using the modified Bavarian formula. Official decisions may differ by university.
Scale Visual
Comparison Bars
3. Conversion Details
| Metric | Value | Meaning |
|---|
Batch GPA Conversion Table
| Input GPA | German Grade | Descriptor | Status |
|---|
German Grade Interpretation Table
| German Grade Range | German Term | English Meaning | Planning Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0–1.5 | Sehr gut | Very good / excellent | Strong academic profile, but admission still depends on program rules. |
| 1.6–2.5 | Gut | Good | Generally competitive for many programs when other requirements are met. |
| 2.6–3.5 | Befriedigend | Satisfactory | May meet minimums for some programs; check exact cutoffs. |
| 3.6–4.0 | Ausreichend | Sufficient / passing | Passing range, but selective programs may require stronger grades. |
| 4.1–5.0 | Nicht ausreichend | Insufficient / fail | Usually below German passing range. |
4. Application Planning Notes
| Topic | What to Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Official conversion | University examination regulations, admission office, or uni-assist instructions | This calculator is an estimate. Official conversions can use institutional rules. |
| Maximum grade | Transcript grading scale or university grading explanation | \(N_{\max}\) must be the best possible grade in the original system. |
| Minimum passing grade | Transcript, school handbook, registrar, or official grading scale | \(N_{\min}\) changes the result significantly. |
| German application timeline | Program page, university portal, uni-assist deadline, semester intake | There is no single GPA-conversion exam timetable. Deadlines vary by university and program. |
| Numerus clausus / grade cutoff | Program-specific admission page | Some programs rank applicants by converted grade, while others use additional criteria. |
| Credential evaluation | Anabin, uni-assist, university international office | Grade conversion is only one part of eligibility and recognition. |
American GPA to German GPA Formula
The commonly used conversion method is the modified Bavarian formula. It converts a foreign grade into the German scale, where 1.0 is best and 4.0 is the minimum passing grade.
For a common U.S. 4.0 scale with a 2.0 minimum passing GPA, the formula becomes:
Example for a 3.50 GPA:
Reverse conversion from German grade back to the original GPA scale can be rearranged as:
A weighted GPA can be calculated before conversion:
Complete Guide to American GPA to German GPA Conversion
American GPA to German GPA conversion is important for students applying to German universities, scholarship programs, exchange programs, graduate schools, and credential evaluation services. The challenge is that the two systems are reversed. In the United States, a higher GPA is better. In Germany, a lower grade is better. A U.S. 4.0 is excellent, while a German 1.0 is excellent. A U.S. 2.0 may be considered a minimum passing or graduation threshold in many contexts, while a German 4.0 is the minimum passing grade in many university contexts.
The modified Bavarian formula is widely used because it adjusts the student’s grade relative to the best possible grade and the minimum passing grade of the original system. This is important because a 3.5 GPA does not mean the same thing on every scale. Some institutions use a 4.0 maximum, some use 4.3, some use weighted 5.0 scales, and some report percentages instead of GPA. A good converter must let the user enter the correct maximum and minimum passing grade.
The default setting in this tool uses \(N_{\max}=4.0\) and \(N_{\min}=2.0\). That is a common planning assumption for U.S. college GPA conversion when the best possible grade is 4.0 and the minimum passing or minimum graduation GPA is treated as 2.0. However, this is not universal. Some U.S. transcripts treat D as a course-passing grade with 1.0 grade points, while a program or institution may require a 2.0 cumulative GPA for good standing or graduation. German institutions may require the grading scale from the transcript or from the university’s official grading explanation.
This is why the calculator includes a custom scale option. If your transcript states that the highest possible GPA is 4.0 and the lowest passing grade is 1.0, use 4.0 and 1.0. If your school uses a 4.3 scale, use 4.3 as the maximum. If your school uses a 5.0 weighted scale, use 5.0 as the maximum only when the official GPA was calculated on that weighted basis and the German institution accepts that scale explanation.
A common mistake is to convert a U.S. GPA by simply subtracting it from 5. For example, someone may assume 3.5 becomes 1.5 because \(5-3.5=1.5\). That shortcut ignores the minimum passing grade and does not follow the modified Bavarian formula. The formula is better because it uses the student’s position between the best possible grade and the minimum passing grade.
Another common mistake is treating a German grade like a percentage. A German 2.0 is not 2 out of 5 in the same way a 40% score is 40 out of 100. German grade interpretation is qualitative and institutional. A 1.0–1.5 grade is usually described as very good, 1.6–2.5 as good, 2.6–3.5 as satisfactory, and 3.6–4.0 as sufficient or passing. Grades above 4.0 are usually failing in university contexts.
If a student has a 3.50 GPA on a 4.0 scale and uses 2.0 as the minimum passing GPA, the formula gives 1.75. Depending on rounding policy, that may be displayed as 1.8 or as the nearest common German grade step. But the exact institutional rounding rule may differ. Some universities round to one decimal, some use common German grade steps such as 1.0, 1.3, 1.7, 2.0, and so on, and some admissions offices may calculate internally without using the same display method.
Letter grades require caution. A letter grade such as A, B, or C must first be mapped to a numerical grade point value. A common U.S. mapping is A = 4.0, A- = 3.7, B+ = 3.3, B = 3.0, B- = 2.7, C+ = 2.3, C = 2.0, C- = 1.7, D+ = 1.3, D = 1.0, and F = 0.0. But some institutions have their own letter-grade policies. Use the official grade-point table from the transcript whenever available.
Percentage conversion also requires the correct maximum and minimum passing value. A percentage system may use 100 as the maximum, but the minimum passing percentage can differ: 40, 50, 60, or another value. If the minimum passing percentage changes, the German grade changes. This is why percentage conversion should not be done with a simple universal percentage chart.
Weighted course GPA can be calculated when students have individual course grades and credits. The weighted GPA is the sum of grade points times credits divided by the total credits. This is different from a simple average. A 4-credit course affects the GPA more than a 1-credit course. This tool includes a course builder so students can calculate a weighted GPA before converting.
The German grade produced by this calculator is best understood as an estimate. Admissions offices may use their own verified conversion process. Some universities use uni-assist. Some evaluate directly. Some programs apply special cutoffs. Some master’s programs require a German-equivalent grade better than a certain threshold, such as 2.5 or 2.7. Some programs use rankings, interviews, portfolios, entrance exams, motivation letters, or subject-specific coursework in addition to GPA.
Students should also distinguish between eligibility and competitiveness. A converted German grade may meet the formal minimum but still not guarantee admission. Highly selective programs can receive many applicants with strong grades. Conversely, a student with a moderate GPA may still be eligible for programs where selection criteria include professional experience, research fit, language proficiency, or prerequisite coursework.
The most reliable workflow is to gather the transcript, grading scale, maximum possible grade, minimum passing grade, cumulative GPA, course list, credits, and official grading explanation. Then use the calculator for planning. Finally, verify the conversion with the target university, uni-assist, or the official application portal.
There is no single exam timetable for GPA conversion. German university application deadlines vary by university, degree level, citizenship category, application route, semester intake, and whether the application goes through uni-assist. Many programs have winter-semester and summer-semester application windows, but the dates are not universal. Always check the specific program page.
This page is not a legal credential-evaluation service. It does not replace anabin, uni-assist, a university international office, or an official admissions decision. It is a transparent calculator that shows the formula, inputs, assumptions, and result so students can understand the conversion before applying.
Reference Links
Useful references: TUM Grade Conversion using the Bavarian Formula, uni-assist grading system explanation, Leibniz University Hannover grade conversion table, anabin database.
How to Use the American GPA to German GPA Converter
- Choose the conversion mode. Use American GPA to German GPA for most applications.
- Enter your GPA. Type your cumulative U.S. GPA exactly as shown on your transcript.
- Choose the GPA scale. Use the preset for 4.0, 4.3, or 5.0 scales, or enter a custom maximum and minimum passing grade.
- Check the scale direction. U.S. GPA normally uses “higher is better.”
- Click Convert GPA. The tool calculates the German-equivalent grade using the modified Bavarian formula.
- Review the descriptor. Check whether the result is very good, good, satisfactory, sufficient, or below passing range.
- Verify officially. Use the result for planning, then confirm with the university, uni-assist, or official admission documents.
| Input Type | Best Use | Warning |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. GPA | Most common American transcript conversion. | Confirm whether the minimum passing GPA should be 2.0, 1.0, or another official value. |
| Letter grade | Single-course grade estimation. | Use the institution’s official letter-to-grade-point mapping if available. |
| Percentage | Schools that report percentage results. | Minimum passing percentage must be accurate. |
| Weighted courses | Calculating a GPA from course grades and credits. | Use official credits and official grade points. |
| Batch conversion | Comparing several GPA scenarios. | Batch output uses the same scale settings for every row. |
Score, Course, and Timeline Note
| Requested Item | Status for This GPA Tool | Correct Guidance |
|---|---|---|
| Score guidelines | Included as interpretation ranges | German 1.0–4.0 passing ranges are shown for planning. |
| Score table | Included | The German grade interpretation table explains very good, good, satisfactory, sufficient, and fail ranges. |
| Next exam timetable | Not applicable | GPA conversion has no universal exam date. Application deadlines vary by university and program. |
| Course relevance | University admission planning | Useful for German university applications, scholarships, credential evaluation, and academic planning. |
American GPA to German GPA FAQ
How do I convert a U.S. GPA to a German GPA?
Use the modified Bavarian formula: \(x = 1 + 3\cdot\frac{N_{\max}-N_d}{N_{\max}-N_{\min}}\), where \(x\) is the German grade, \(N_{\max}\) is the best possible grade, \(N_{\min}\) is the minimum passing grade, and \(N_d\) is your GPA.
What is a 3.5 GPA in Germany?
On a 4.0 scale with 2.0 as the minimum passing GPA, 3.5 converts to about 1.75 before rounding. If your minimum passing grade is different, the result changes.
Is a lower German GPA better?
Yes. In the German university grading scale, 1.0 is the best common grade and 4.0 is the minimum passing grade.
Should I use 2.0 or 1.0 as the minimum passing U.S. GPA?
Use the minimum passing grade stated by your institution or required by the German university. Many planning examples use 2.0 as the minimum cumulative passing/graduation GPA, but some course-level systems use D = 1.0.
Can this calculator guarantee my German university admission grade?
No. It gives a planning estimate. Official grade conversion is controlled by the university, uni-assist, or the relevant admission regulations.
Can I convert a weighted 5.0 GPA?
Yes. Choose the 5.0 scale preset or enter a custom maximum grade. Use this only if your official transcript reports the GPA on that weighted scale.
Can I convert German GPA back to U.S. GPA?
Yes. Use the German to American GPA mode. The tool rearranges the Bavarian formula to estimate the original-scale GPA.
