This SEE GPA calculator saves you from doing the weighted math yourself after results come out. You got your letter grades on the marksheet — now you need one number. Your GPA. And colleges want it fast.
Just pick your theory and practical grades for each subject, hit calculate, done.
SEE GPA Calculator
Theory & practical grade points (75/25), Computer optional (50/50). Weighted mean of 7 subjects—aligned with common NEB SEE tools.
Compulsory subjects
English
Nepali
Mathematics
Science
Social Studies
Optional subjects
Optional I
Optional II
Weights: theory 75, practical 25 (same as other subjects).
Result
| Subject | Th | Pr | Weighted GPA |
|---|
For official results, always refer to your NEB grade sheet. This tool uses the usual weighted grade-point method; boards may apply additional rules.
Marks ranges (theory 75 / practical 25) match the letter grades below. Computer (optional) uses 50 marks theory and 50 marks practical.
| Grade | GP | Theory 75 | Practical 25 |
|---|---|---|---|
| A+ | 4.00 | 67.5–75 | 22.5–25 |
| A | 3.60 | 60–67.49 | 20–22.49 |
| B+ | 3.20 | 52.5–59.99 | 17.5–19.99 |
| B | 2.80 | 45–52.49 | 15–17.49 |
| C+ | 2.40 | 37.5–44.99 | 12.5–14.99 |
| C | 2.00 | 30–37.49 | 10–12.49 |
| D | 1.60 | 26.25–29.99 | 8.75–9.99 |
| NG | — | Below 26.25 | Below 8.75 |
GPA formula
Per subject: (GPtheory × Wth + GPpractical × Wpr) ÷ (Wth + Wpr),
with weights 75 and 25, or 50 and 50 for Computer.
Overall GPA: average of the seven subject GPAs (equal credit per subject).
About this calculator
Enter letter grades for theory and practical for each subject. The calculator applies the same grade-to-marks bands and weights described on common SEE GPA pages (including optional Computer as 50/50).
Why You Can’t Just Average Your Grades
A lot of students add up their grade points and divide by 7. That gives the wrong number.
NEB’s system weights theory and practical differently. Theory carries 75 marks, practical carries 25. So a strong theory grade pulls your subject GPA up more than a strong practical grade does. You have to account for that weighting — otherwise your GPA calculation of SEE comes out slightly off, which matters when you’re filling out plus two admission forms or scholarship applications.
This SEE GPA calculator handles the weighted formula automatically. You just select grades.
NEB Grade Points at a Glance
| Grade | Grade Point |
|---|---|
| A+ | 4.00 |
| A | 3.60 |
| B+ | 3.20 |
| B | 2.80 |
| C+ | 2.40 |
| C | 2.00 |
| D | 1.60 |
| NG | — |
NG means Not Graded — a fail. If any subject shows NG, that subject has no grade point contribution and you’ll need to clear it through grade upgrade before most colleges process your admission.
How to Calculate GPA in SEE Using This Calculator
Follow the fields exactly as they appear.
Compulsory Subjects — English, Nepali, Mathematics, Science, Social Studies
These five appear first. Each subject has two dropdowns. The first one is Theory grade (75) — select the letter grade you got in the written exam. Right below it is Practical grade (25) — select your practical or internal assessment grade.
Do this for all five subjects before moving down. Don’t leave any dropdown on “Select grade” — the calculator needs both theory and practical for every subject to compute the weighted GPA correctly.
Optional I
First select your subject from the dropdown — choices are Additional Mathematics, Economics, or Population. Then select Theory grade (75) and Practical grade (25) for whichever subject you picked.
Optional II
Select your subject — Account or Computer. Then fill theory and practical grades.
One thing to note here — if you select Computer, the weight split changes. Computer runs on 50 marks theory and 50 marks practical instead of the usual 75/25. The GPA calculator adjusts for this automatically the moment you select Computer, so you don’t need to do anything differently. Just select your grades normally.
Click Calculate GPA
The result table loads showing each subject with its Theory grade, Practical grade, and Weighted GPA side by side. Your overall GPA appears at the bottom — the average of all seven subject GPAs.
Want to try different grade combinations? Hit Reset and start fresh.
The Formula This SEE GPA Calculator Uses
Per subject: (Theory GP × 75 + Practical GP × 25) ÷ 100
For Computer optional: (Theory GP × 50 + Practical GP × 50) ÷ 100
Overall GPA = total of all 7 subject GPAs ÷ 7
Quick example — English, A+ theory (4.0) and A practical (3.6): (4.0 × 75 + 3.6 × 25) ÷ 100 = (300 + 90) ÷ 100 = 3.90
That’s your English subject GPA. Repeat for all subjects, average them — that’s your final SEE GPA. The calculator does all seven at once.
What GPA Do You Actually Need?
Depends entirely on what you want to do after SEE.
Science stream at a decent plus two college — most expect 3.5 and above. Competitive colleges push that closer to 3.7 or 3.8. Management and humanities are more relaxed, 3.0 to 3.2 gets you comfortable options in most places.
Government scholarships and most private ones set their own cutoffs but 3.6 and above generally keeps you in the running for most of them.
NG in even one subject is a separate problem — overall GPA doesn’t matter much until that’s cleared.
FAQs
My marksheet only shows letter grades, no numbers — can I still use this? That’s exactly how the calculator works. You pick letter grades from the dropdowns. No marks needed, just A+, A, B+ and so on.
Will this GPA match what NEB officially has? Very close. The calculator uses the standard NEB weighted formula. But for college admission and official forms, always use the GPA printed on your actual NEB grade sheet — not a third-party calculator result.
I didn’t have a separate practical exam — what do I enter for practical? Some schools handle this as internal assessment. Whatever grade your school gave you for that component, enter it. NEB assigns a grade for every subject component regardless of format.
Can I use this to figure out what grades I’d need to hit a target GPA? Yes. Enter grades you already know, then experiment with different grades in the remaining subjects. Useful for grade upgrade planning.
Why does Computer show different weights? Computer optional is structured as 50 marks theory and 50 marks practical — different from every other subject. The calculator picks this up automatically when you select Computer in Optional II.
Run your grades through the SEE GPA calculator above before your plus two admission rush starts. Knowing your number ahead of time saves a lot of last-minute stress.
For any official use, always refer to your NEB issued grade sheet.
