Student calculator

CGPA to Percentage Calculator Online

Enter your CGPA and get the percentage quickly. You can use the CBSE formula or the common general formula used by many students.

Calculate Percentage

Your Percentage is: --

Formula used: CGPA × 9.5

Convert CGPA to Percentage Without Guessing

Many students get confused when converting CGPA into percentage, especially when different formulas are used in different places. One website says one thing, a friend says something else, and then you start wondering which number to write in a form. This calculator keeps it simple, so you can get a clear answer without doing the multiplication manually.

For CBSE, the commonly used formula is very straightforward: multiply your CGPA by 9.5. So if your CGPA is 8.0, the percentage will be 8.0 × 9.5, which is 76%. This is the formula many students use while filling admission forms, resumes, or basic academic details. Still, it is always better to check the rule mentioned by your school, college, university, or the form you are filling.

The General Formula option is kept for students who simply want to multiply CGPA by 10. Some colleges and private institutions mention their own conversion method, so this option can be useful for quick comparison. The calculator shows the formula below the result, which helps you know exactly how the answer was calculated.

This tool is useful for school students, college students, freshers preparing resumes, and anyone who needs a quick academic conversion. You only need to enter your CGPA between 0 and 10, choose the formula, and click calculate. If the value is not valid, the calculator will show an error instead of giving a wrong result.

Why This Helps

FAQ

How to convert CGPA to percentage?

Multiply your CGPA by the formula asked by your board or college. For CBSE, students commonly use CGPA × 9.5.

What is the CBSE formula?

The CBSE formula is CGPA × 9.5. For example, 8 CGPA becomes 76% using this method.

Is CGPA same for all boards?

No, not always. Different boards and universities may follow different conversion rules, so check official instructions when it matters.