How to Compute GWA in College Philippines Step-by-Step Guide

To compute GWA in college in the Philippines, multiply each subject’s final grade by its credit units, add all the products together to get total quality points, then divide by the total number of units enrolled. This is the standard GWA computation formula used by CHED-accredited universities including UP, UST, PUP, NU, FEU, STI, and all State Universities and Colleges (SUCs). Use our free GWA Calculator Philippines to compute your GWA automatically, or follow the complete step-by-step guide below.

The GWA Formula How GWA is Computed in the Philippines

The General Weighted Average (GWA) formula is the same across all Philippine universities that use the standard 1.00–5.00 numerical scale. There is only one correct formula:

GWA = Σ (Subject Grade × Credit Units) ÷ Total Units Enrolled

Breaking this down:

  • Σ means ‘sum of’ you add everything together
  • Subject Grade = the final numerical grade you received (1.00, 1.75, 2.00, etc.)
  • Credit Units = the number of units that subject carries (1, 2, 3, 5, etc.)
  • Total Units Enrolled = sum of all units you enrolled in that semester

The formula gives more weight to subjects with higher units. A 5-unit Engineering subject contributes five times more to your GWA than a 1-unit PE class. This is why the formula is called ‘weighted’ not all subjects are treated equally.

How to Compute GWA in College Step by Step

Follow these four steps to compute your GWA correctly every time.

Step 1: Gather Your Final Grades and Credit Units

Get your official grade slip or Certificate of Registration (COR). For each subject, note down two things: the final numerical grade (e.g., 1.75) and the number of credit units (e.g., 3). Both are printed on your grade slip. Do not use midterm or preliminary grades only use the FINAL grade recorded by the registrar.

Step 2: Multiply Each Grade by Its Units

For every subject, multiply the final grade by the credit units. This gives you the ‘quality points’ for that subject.

SubjectFinal GradeUnitsGrade × Units (Quality Pts)
Mathematics (Major)1.5051.50 × 5 = 7.50
English2.0032.00 × 3 = 6.00
Filipino1.7531.75 × 3 = 5.25
Physical Education1.2521.25 × 2 = 2.50
NSTP1.0031.00 × 3 = 3.00

Step 3: Add All Quality Points Together

Add all the Grade × Units products:

7.50 + 6.00 + 5.25 + 2.50 + 3.00 = 24.25 total quality points

Step 4: Divide by Total Units Enrolled

Add up all the credit units (5 + 3 + 3 + 2 + 3 = 16 units), then divide:

GWA = 24.25 ÷ 16 = 1.52

Result: GWA of 1.52 Magna Cum Laude range (87–92%). Mathematics with 5 units contributed 7.50 quality points out of 24.25 total nearly one-third of the entire GWA from a single subject. This is why high-unit major subjects have the most impact on your GWA.

Complete GWA Computation Example Full Semester

Here is a complete semester computation showing every step from raw grades to final GWA:

SubjectFinal GradeUnitsQuality Pts
Engineering Mathematics1.2556.25
Physics1.5046.00
Programming 11.7535.25
Technical Communication2.0036.00
Physical Education1.0022.00
NSTP1.0033.00
Filipino1.7535.25
TOTAL23 units33.75 quality points

GWA = 33.75 ÷ 23 = 1.47 Magna Cum Laude range. Qualifies for Dean’s List.

Semestral GWA vs Cumulative GWA Critical Difference

How to Compute Semestral GWA

Semestral GWA uses only the subjects and grades from that specific semester. Enter only that semester’s subjects. The result is used for:

  • Dean’s List eligibility requires GWA ≤1.75 with no failing grades that semester
  • Scholarship maintenance check each term
  • Academic probation or dismissal review

How to Compute Cumulative GWA

Cumulative GWA covers your entire college record all subjects from first year through your most recently completed semester. This is what appears on your Transcript of Records and determines eligibility for Latin honors at graduation.

 Never compute cumulative GWA by averaging your semestral GWAs. That gives wrong results whenever semesters have different unit loads which is almost always the case.Critical rule:

SemesterSemestral GWAUnitsCorrect Weight
1st Sem, 1st Year1.5021 units54% of total
2nd Sem, 1st Year2.0018 units46% of total
Simple average (WRONG)1.75Ignores unit difference
Correct cumulative GWA1.7339 units total(21×1.50 + 18×2.00) ÷ 39

The difference between 1.75 and 1.73 matters enormously 1.75 is exactly the Cum Laude threshold. Computing it wrong could cause you to incorrectly believe you qualify for Latin honors when you don’t.

How to Compute GWA by University UP, UST, PUP, NU

How to Compute GWA in UP (University of the Philippines)

UP uses the standard GWA formula with three critical differences:

  • 4.00 grade = Conditional Pass NOT included in GWA; student has one year to resolve via removal exam
  • DRP (Dropped) subjects = completely excluded from GWA computation
  • INC (Incomplete) = not included until the incomplete requirement is resolved and final grade recorded

UP also distinguishes University Scholar (GWA ≤1.45, no grade below 3.00) and College Scholar (GWA ≤1.75, no grade below 3.00). Both are computed using standard semestral GWA.

How to Compute GWA in UST (University of Santo Tomas)

UST uses the standard formula. The key difference is the Dean’s List two-condition rule: a student needs BOTH a semestral GWA of 1.75 or better AND no individual subject grade above 2.00. A GWA of 1.60 with one subject at 2.25 does NOT qualify.

How to Compute GWA in PUP (Polytechnic University of the Philippines)

PUP uses the standard GWA formula on the 1.00–5.00 scale. PUP adopted zero-based grading campus-wide — raw scores are directly mapped to grades without using the transmutation formula. The GWA computation is identical to the standard method.

How to Compute GWA in NU (National University)

NU follows the standard 1.00–5.00 scale and formula. Dean’s List requires semestral GWA ≤1.75 with no INC and no 5.00 grades in that specific term.

How to Compute GWA in DepEd SHS (Senior High School)

DepEd SHS uses a percentage-based system (60–100), not the 1.00–5.00 scale. Subject grades are composed of Written Work (25%) + Performance Tasks (50%) + Quarterly Assessment (25%). The SHS GWA is the simple average of all subject grades since all carry equal weight.

What Subjects to Include and Exclude in GWA Computation

This is the most common source of errors in manual GWA computation. The rule is straightforward:

Figure 6: What to Include and Exclude in GWA Computation

Grade NotationInclude in GWA?Rule
Numerical grade (1.00–3.00)YES alwaysAll passing numerical grades included
5.00 (Failed)YES alwaysFailing grades included and hurt GWA
INC (Incomplete)NO not yetOnly after final grade is recorded
DRP (Dropped) — UPNO excludedUP policy: DRP never counts in GWA
OD / FA (Absent failure)YES alwaysCounts as failing permanently
P grade — UP pandemicNO excludedUP excluded P marks from GWA
Non-credit / audit subjectsNONo GWA impact

Include EVERY subject with a final numerical grade major subjects, minor subjects, PE, NSTP, theology, ROTC, and all electives. The only valid exclusions are DRP (UP only), unresolved INC, and officially designated non-credit subjects.Most important rule: 

5 Common GWA Computation Mistakes And How to Avoid Them

Mistake 1: Using Simple Average Instead of Weighted Average

Adding all grades and dividing by number of subjects gives a simple average, NOT GWA. A student with 5 subjects at 1.00, 2.00, 3.00, 1.50, and 2.00 has a simple average of 1.90. But if the 3.00 subject carries 5 units and the 1.00 subject carries only 1 unit, the actual GWA is 2.25. Always multiply by units first.

Mistake 2: Averaging Semestral GWAs for Cumulative GWA

Taking the average of semestral GWAs only gives the correct cumulative GWA if every semester had exactly equal unit loads. In practice this never happens. Always enter all subjects from all semesters into the formula together.

Mistake 3: Including Unresolved INC Grades

An INC grade has no numerical value. Including it as a zero or any other number produces a wrong GWA. Only include a subject with INC after the professor records a final numerical grade and the registrar posts it officially.

Mistake 4: Forgetting to Include Failed Subjects (5.00)

Some students omit subjects they failed when computing GWA, hoping it won’t count. It counts permanently. A 5.00 in a 3-unit subject adds 15.00 quality points to your total, which significantly raises (worsens) your GWA. Never omit any subject with a final numerical grade.

Mistake 5: Using Midterm or Prelim Grades Instead of Final Grades

GWA is always computed from FINAL subject grades the grade on your official transcript. Preliminary, midterm, or periodical grades are intermediate. Only the final grade officially posted by the registrar is used.

How to Compute GWA in Excel

If you prefer a spreadsheet, the exact Excel formula is:

=SUMPRODUCT(grades_range, units_range) / SUM(units_range)

Step-by-step setup:

  1. Column A: Subject names
  2. Column B: Final grades (1.00, 1.75, 2.00, etc.)
  3. Column C: Credit units (1, 2, 3, 5, etc.)
  4. In an empty cell below: =SUMPRODUCT(B2:B10, C2:C10) / SUM(C2:C10)

This formula is mathematically identical to the manual GWA computation. SUMPRODUCT multiplies each grade by its units and sums everything in one step, then divides by total units.

Target GWA Values — What GWA Do You Need?

GoalGWA RequiredNotes
Summa Cum Laude1.00 – 1.20Zero failing grades on entire transcript
Magna Cum Laude1.21 – 1.45Zero failing grades required
Cum Laude1.46 – 1.75Zero failing grades required
Dean’s List (per semester)GWA ≤ 1.75No INC, no 5.00 that specific semester
DOST-SEI ScholarshipGWA ≤ 2.00Verify specific program requirements
Good Academic StandingGWA ≤ 2.50Passing and maintaining enrollment
Graduation (most universities)GWA ≤ 3.00No failing grades on transcript

For the complete Latin honors requirements at every Philippine university, see our guide on Dean’s List and Latin honors requirements Philippines.

Frequently Asked Questions How to Compute GWA in College

What is the formula for computing GWA in the Philippines?

GWA = Sum of (Grade × Units for each subject) ÷ Total Units Enrolled. Multiply each subject’s final grade by its credit units, add all products, divide by total units enrolled. This is the standard formula used by all CHED-accredited Philippine universities on the 1.00–5.00 numerical scale.

How do I compute my GWA if I have an INC grade?

Exclude the INC subject entirely until it is resolved. Once your professor records a final grade and the registrar posts it, include that subject with its final grade and units in your computation.

How do I compute GWA for all 4 years of college?

Enter all subjects from all semesters first year through your most recently completed term into the GWA formula together. Add all quality points from all years, add all units from all years, divide. Never average semestral GWAs. This gives your correct cumulative GWA.

What is the minimum GWA to graduate in the Philippines?

Most Philippine universities require a cumulative GWA of 3.00 or better (numerically 3.00 or lower on the 1.00–5.00 scale) with no failing grades to qualify for graduation. Engineering, law, and medicine programs often have stricter requirements. Always confirm with your registrar.

How many decimal places should I use when computing GWA?

Philippine universities express GWA to two decimal places (e.g., 1.52, 1.75). Carry all decimal places through the calculation and round only the final result to two places. Do not round intermediate values as this introduces cumulative rounding errors.

Does a dropped subject affect my GWA?

At UP, officially dropped subjects (DRP notation) are completely excluded from GWA. At most other universities, subjects dropped before the official deadline are excluded. Subjects with OD or FA notations are included as failing grades. Check your school’s specific policy.

What GWA do I need for Dean’s List?

At most Philippine universities, Dean’s List requires a semestral GWA of 1.75 or better with no failing grades and no INC in that semester. UST has a stricter rule: GWA ≤1.75 AND no individual subject above 2.00. UP requires GWA ≤1.75 with no grade below 3.00 for College Scholar.

Can I compute GWA without knowing my credit units?

No. Credit units are essential to the formula. Without them you can only compute a simple average, which gives an incorrect GWA. Credit units are printed on your grade slip, Certificate of Registration (COR), and official transcript.

What is the difference between semestral GWA and cumulative GWA?

Semestral GWA covers one semester used for Dean’s List and scholarship checks. Cumulative GWA covers all semesters from first year to present used for Latin honors and appears on your Transcript of Records. Both use the same formula but semestral uses only that term’s subjects.

Is there a free tool to compute GWA automatically?

Yes. Use the GWA Calculator Philippines to compute semestral or cumulative GWA instantly. Enter grades and credit units, select your university tab (UP, UST, PUP, NU, PISAY, DepEd SHS), and click Calculate. The tool applies the standard formula automatically and shows Latin honor status, GPA equivalent, and subject-by-subject quality point breakdown. 100% free, no login required.

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