Extra Credit Calculator
See exactly how extra credit will affect your grade, or find out how many extra credit points you need to reach your target grade.
Enter your current grade and the extra credit opportunity details to see how it will affect your overall grade.
How to Use the Extra Credit Calculator
The Extra Credit Calculator helps students understand exactly how much extra credit opportunities will affect their grade, and how many extra credit points they need to reach a target grade.
- Impact tab: Enter your current grade, the extra credit points available, the max points on the extra credit assignment, and what percentage of your final grade the extra credit represents. The calculator shows your new grade after completing the extra credit.
- How Much Needed tab: Enter your current grade, target grade, extra credit weight, and max points to find out exactly how many extra credit points you need to earn to reach your goal.
Understanding extra credit math can help you make smart decisions about where to invest your study time, especially during finals season when time is limited. The Advanced tier below models multiple extra credit opportunities across the semester. The Professional tier provides a full grade recovery planner.
Add all available extra credit opportunities and see the cumulative impact on your grade.
| Extra Credit | Category | Points Earned | Max Points | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Extra Credit Impact Formula
Where:
EC Score% = (Extra Credit Points ÷ EC Max Points) × 100
EC Weight = Percentage of final grade (as decimal)
Example: Current 82%, EC is 5 pts on 100-pt assignment worth 10% of grade
EC Score% = (5 ÷ 100) × 100 = 5%
New Grade = 82 × 0.90 + 5 × 0.10 = 73.8 + 0.5 = 74.3%
Points Needed Formula
Points Needed = (EC Score% ÷ 100) × EC Max Points
Example: Current 82%, target 85%, EC worth 10% of grade, 100 max pts
EC Score% = (85 − 82 × 0.90) ÷ 0.10 = (85 − 73.8) ÷ 0.10 = 112%
Points = (112 ÷ 100) × 100 = 112 pts — not achievable on a 100-pt assignment
Practical Example
Situation: Taylor has an 82% in Biology. The professor offers an extra credit lab report worth 10% of the final grade (100 possible points). Taylor wants to know: (1) what happens if they score 85/100, and (2) whether they can reach a 90% (A-).
Impact: New Grade = 82 × 0.90 + 85 × 0.10 = 73.8 + 8.5 = 82.3%. The extra credit only improves the grade by 0.3 percentage points.
Target 90%: EC% Needed = (90 − 82 × 0.90) ÷ 0.10 = 162%. Taylor would need 162 out of 100 points — impossible. Extra credit worth only 10% of the grade simply can't close an 8-point gap.
| Course | Credits | Current % | Grade | EC Available | EC Taken | New % | New Grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 76.0 | C | |||||
| B- | 82.0 | B- | |||||
| B+ | 88.0 | B+ | |||||
| C- | 71.0 | C- | |||||
| B | 85.0 | B |
Understanding Extra Credit Math
Extra credit is often misunderstood by students. Here are the key insights that the math reveals:
- Weight matters enormously: Extra credit worth 2% of your final grade can only move your grade by 2 points at most. Extra credit worth 10% can move your grade by up to 10 points.
- Your current grade matters: If the extra credit score is lower than your current grade percentage, it actually pulls your grade down. Always score well on extra credit assignments.
- Diminishing returns: The closer you are to 100%, the less room extra credit has to help. Going from 82% to 85% is much easier than going from 95% to 98%.
- Multiple small EC opportunities beat one large one: If you can find multiple 2-3% extra credit opportunities and score well on all of them, the cumulative effect is more predictable.