Australia Hub • Calculators
Australian Grade to 7 Converter 2026 | Free Online Tool
Convert your Australian university grades (HD, D, C, P) into a 7-point GPA. Learn how your High Distinctions and Credits translate to standard GPA values for postgraduate applications.
7-Point GPA Calculator
Calculate your cumulative Grade Point Average on the standard Australian 7.0 scale.
Your Subjects
Subject Name
Grade
Credits
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Credits:
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Credits:
Grade:
Credits:
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Cumulative GPA
5.500
Out of 7.000 Scale
Your GPA is weighted by the credit points of each subject. A 10-credit subject has less impact on your GPA than a 20-credit subject.
Frequently Asked Questions
The standard Australian GPA scale is out of 7.0. It maps to the common university grading system: High Distinction (HD) = 7.0, Distinction (D) = 6.0, Credit (C) = 5.0, Pass (P) = 4.0, and Fail (F) = 0.0. To calculate your overall GPA, you multiply the GPA value of each grade by the credit points of the subject, add them all together, and divide by the total number of credit points attempted.
A 5.0 GPA is equivalent to a Credit average (typically marks between 65% and 74%). It is considered a solid, respectable grade in Australia. A 5.0 GPA is often the minimum threshold required to apply for many postgraduate Master's coursework degrees. However, for highly competitive programs like Medicine, Dentistry, or Clinical Psychology, you generally need a GPA closer to 6.5–7.0.
A High Distinction (HD) is the highest standard grade awarded at Australian universities. It usually requires a mark of 85% or above (some universities use 80% as the cutoff). Achieving an HD is difficult and indicates exceptional performance. On the standard 7-point GPA scale, an HD is worth a perfect 7.0.
Converting an Australian 7-point GPA to a US 4.0 scale is not a simple direct mathematical conversion because the distribution of grades is different. However, broadly speaking: an Australian HD (7.0) is considered an A (4.0); a D (6.0) is often considered an A- or B+ (3.7-3.3); a C (5.0) is a B (3.0); and a P (4.0) is a C (2.0). Many US admissions offices use specialized credential evaluation services like WES (World Education Services) to perform official conversions.
Yes. If you fail a subject (0-49%), it is recorded as a 0.0 on your GPA scale but the credit points still count toward your total attempted credits in the denominator of the GPA calculation. This means a fail significantly drags down your overall GPA. If you repeat the subject and pass, both the original fail and the new pass are usually included in your cumulative GPA calculation, depending on specific university policy.