London School of Economics (LSE)

Modify Grading System
Semester 1
SNoSubject Credit Grade
1
2
3

Grading System at London School of Economics (LSE)

The grading scale used by this calculator for London School of Economics (LSE):

GradeGrade Point
A+4
A4
A-3.7
B+3.3
B3
B-2.7
C+2.3
C2
C-1.7
D+1.3
D1
D-0.7
F/E/NC0
Verify with current London School of Economics (LSE) regulations. Use "Modify Grading System" to adjust if needed.

How to Use This London School of Economics (LSE) GPA Calculator

A 60-second walkthrough of the calculator on this page. The tool runs entirely in your browser — nothing is uploaded.

  1. Enter your courses for Semester 1. Three rows are pre-filled. Click Add Subject to add more (up to 25), or the icon next to any row to remove it.
  2. Edit each row inline. Type the course name, set the credit / unit value, and pick the grade from the dropdown. The grade list reflects the official London School of Economics (LSE) grading scale.
  3. Click Calculate SGPA to compute your semester GPA. The result shows in the button label.
  4. Add more semesters. Use Add Semester to add another term, or Remove Semester to drop the last one. You can model up to 16 semesters.
  5. Your CGPA updates automatically at the bottom of the page once any semester has been calculated.
  6. Doesn’t match your transcript? Click Modify Grading System at the top to edit the grade-to-point mapping. Your changes save for this browser session.
  7. View the breakdown via the View Calculation link to see grade points and weighted totals semester by semester. Useful for double-checking the math.
  8. Share this calculator using the Share button below the CGPA card. It opens your device’s native share sheet with a link to this calculator page — useful for sending the tool to classmates. (It does not share your scores; calculations stay in your browser.)

Your data is stored only in this browser tab’s session storage — closing the tab clears it. There are no accounts and nothing is sent to a server.

How to Calculate GPA at London School of Economics (LSE)

If you want to understand the math behind the calculator, here are the conceptual steps to compute SGPA (Semester GPA) and CGPA (Cumulative GPA) using the London School of Economics (LSE) grading scale.

Step 1 — Definitions

  • GPA: weighted average of grade points across courses.
  • SGPA: GPA for a single semester.
  • CGPA: cumulative GPA across all semesters.

Step 2 — The Formula

SGPA = Σ (Grade Point × Credits) ÷ Σ Credits

CGPA = Σ (All Semester Grade Points) ÷ Σ (All Semester Credits)

Step 3 — Map Each Grade to a Grade Point

Use the grading scale shown at the top of this page (also expandable in the "Modify Grading System" panel) as published by London School of Economics (LSE).

Step 4 — Multiply Grade Point by Credits

For every course, calculate weighted grade points = grade point × credit hours. The weighted approach ensures higher-credit courses count more.

Step 5 — Sum and Divide

Add up the weighted grade points for the semester and divide by the total credit hours. The result is your SGPA. Repeat across semesters and divide cumulative grade points by cumulative credits to get your CGPA.

Worked Example

CourseGradeGrade PointCreditsWeighted
Course 1A+4312.0
Course 2A4312.0

Sum the "Weighted" column and divide by the total credits to get the SGPA.

UK Classification: London School of Economics (LSE) awards classified honours degrees rather than a numeric GPA. The values shown above approximate the conversion to a 4.0 GPA used by US graduate-school applications. Most UK postgraduate offers reference 2:1 or higher (60%+).

Convert Your London School of Economics (LSE) GPA

UK Classification → US 4.0 GPA

  • First (70%+) ↔ 3.7–4.0 GPA
  • Upper Second / 2:1 (60–69%) ↔ 3.3–3.7 GPA
  • Lower Second / 2:2 (50–59%) ↔ 2.7–3.0 GPA
  • Third (40–49%) ↔ 2.0–2.3 GPA

All conversions are approximate. Verify with your university registrar or the admissions office of the institution you are applying to.

Why Calculating Your GPA Matters

  • Graduate school admissions: Most universities publish a minimum CGPA (commonly 3.0/4.0 or 7.0/10.0).
  • Scholarships and financial aid: Merit-based aid uses GPA cutoffs.
  • Internships and recruiting: Many employers filter on a CGPA threshold during campus placements.
  • Honours and Latin distinctions: Cum Laude / Magna Cum Laude / Summa Cum Laude designations are GPA-tied at most US universities.
  • Visa and licensure: Some country-specific work visas and professional licences require an academic-standing letter.

For a deep dive into formulas, conversions, and worked examples for every supported scale, see our complete guide to calculating GPA.

Frequently Asked Questions — London School of Economics (LSE)

Is this calculator official for London School of Economics (LSE)?

No. KnowGPA is an independent tool, not officially affiliated with London School of Economics (LSE). It uses publicly available grading data and may differ from your official transcript if London School of Economics (LSE) has updated its policy. Use the "Modify Grading System" option to adjust grade points if needed.

What is the difference between SGPA and CGPA?

SGPA is your grade-point average for a single semester. CGPA averages every semester you have completed so far in your program.

What grade scale does London School of Economics (LSE) use?

London School of Economics (LSE) uses the scale shown in the grading table on this page. The maximum grade point on the displayed scale is 4.

Can I save my calculation?

Your courses, semesters, and any modifications to the grading scale are saved in your browser session. They persist while the tab is open. Take a screenshot or note down your CGPA if you need it long-term.

Can I add or remove subjects and semesters?

Yes. Use "Add Subject" inside any semester and "Add Semester" / "Remove Semester" controls below the calculator to model your full program.

What if a course is pass/fail or audited?

Pass/fail and audited courses are typically excluded from GPA calculations at most universities. If your course is graded P/NP, leave it out of the calculator or set its credit value to 0.