How to Calculate Your University Grade by Credits (and Hit the Classification You Want)
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
The single biggest mistake students make when estimating their degree grade is taking a simple average of their module marks. Universities almost never work that way. They use a credit-weighted average, which means a module's influence on your final percentage is proportional to how many credits it carries. A 40-credit project counts four times as much as a 10-credit module, so averaging them as equals can throw your estimate off by several percent and even put you in the wrong classification band.
To do it correctly, list every module with two figures: the mark you achieved and the number of credits it is worth. Multiply each mark by its credits, add up all those products, and divide by the total credits. For example, marks of 68%, 72% and 55% in modules worth 20, 20 and 10 credits give (68x20 + 72x20 + 55x10) divided by 50, which works out to 67.4% overall. A full-time year in the UK is usually 120 credits, so your year average should be built from modules that add up to that total.
If your degree weights academic years differently, add one more step. Work out the average for each year on its own using the credit method above, then combine the years with their weightings. A widespread pattern is Year 2 contributing 40% and Year 3 contributing 60%, with Year 1 contributing nothing beyond the requirement to pass it. So a 64% second year and a 70% final year produce an overall of 64x0.40 plus 70x0.60, which is 67.6%, comfortably a 2:1 and within striking distance of a First.
Once you have your running average, the calculator becomes a planning tool. Suppose you are sitting on 67% with one 30-credit module left and the rest of your degree fixed. You can plug in different marks for that final module to see exactly what score lifts your overall figure to 70%. This turns a vague hope of getting a First into a concrete target, letting you direct your revision time where it will actually move the needle rather than spreading effort evenly across everything.
Finally, treat the output as a well-informed estimate rather than gospel. Institutions differ on rounding (some round only the final number, some never round up across a boundary), on whether resit marks are capped, and on how borderline cases are reviewed. The calculation itself is exact, but the rules wrapped around it are set by your university. Use the tool to plan and to check your own working, then confirm the official figure against your handbook or transcript before making any decisions that depend on it.
Quick tips
- Always enter the real credit value for each module (10, 15, 20, 30 and so on); using equal weights silently distorts your average.
- Round only the final overall percentage, never the individual module marks, so early rounding does not push you across a classification boundary.
- To find the mark you still need, lock in your completed modules and increase the outstanding module's score until the average hits your target band.
- If your degree weights years, average each year separately first, then apply the year weightings (for example 40% Year 2 plus 60% Year 3).
The University Grade Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.