SAT to GPA Converter
Convert your SAT score to an approximate GPA equivalent on the 4.0 scale, and see how competitive your profile is for different college tiers.
How to Use the SAT to GPA Converter
The SAT to GPA Converter translates your SAT score into an approximate GPA equivalent on the 4.0 scale, and also helps you assess your college competitiveness based on both your SAT and GPA together. While SAT scores and GPA measure different things, colleges often consider them alongside each other, making this conversion useful for self-assessment.
- Convert tab: Enter your SAT score (400-1600) and instantly see the approximate GPA equivalent, letter grade, and national percentile. The conversion uses a concordance table with linear interpolation between key data points.
- College Chances tab: Enter both your SAT score and actual GPA to see a competitiveness assessment across four tiers of schools, from Ivy League to state universities.
Keep in mind that SAT-to-GPA conversion is inherently approximate. SAT scores measure aptitude on a single test day, while GPA reflects sustained academic performance over years. Use this tool as a rough benchmark, not an exact equivalency.
Need deeper analysis? The Advanced calculator below lets you track SAT prep progress over multiple attempts and compare section scores. For full college-matching analysis, scroll to the Professional tier.
| SAT Score | GPA Equivalent | College Tier |
|---|---|---|
| 1600 | 4.00 | Elite (MIT, Harvard, Stanford) |
| 1550 | 3.95 | Elite (MIT, Harvard, Stanford) |
| 1500 | 3.85 | Highly Selective (Duke, Northwestern) |
| 1450 | 3.75 | Highly Selective (Duke, Northwestern) |
| 1400 | 3.65 | Selective (UCLA, USC) |
| 1350 | 3.55 | Selective (UCLA, USC) |
| 1300 | 3.44 | Selective (University of Florida) |
| 1250 | 3.33 | Moderate (Arizona State) |
| 1200 | 3.20 | Moderate (Arizona State) |
| 1150 | 3.05 | Open Access (many state schools) |
| 1100 | 2.90 | Open Access (many state schools) |
| 1050 | 2.75 | Open Access |
| 1000 | 2.58 | Open Access |
| 950 | 2.40 | Open Access |
| 900 | 2.20 | Open Access |
| 800 | 1.90 | Open Access |
SAT to GPA Concordance Table
The conversion between SAT scores and GPA is based on statistical analysis of student performance data. Since there is no official direct conversion, this calculator uses a widely referenced concordance table with linear interpolation for scores between anchor points:
SAT 1400 → GPA 3.8 (95th percentile)
SAT 1200 → GPA 3.3 (74th percentile)
SAT 1000 → GPA 2.7 (40th percentile)
SAT 800 → GPA 2.0 (10th percentile)
SAT 600 → GPA 1.2 (2nd percentile)
SAT 400 → GPA 0.5 (below 1st percentile)
For scores between these points, linear interpolation is used:
GPA = G1 + (G2 − G1) × (SAT − S1) ÷ (S2 − S1)
Practical Example
Situation: Alex scored 1280 on the SAT and wants to know what GPA equivalent that represents. He also has a 3.5 GPA and wants to see how competitive he is for college.
Using the Convert tab: SAT 1280 falls between the 1200 (GPA 3.3) and 1400 (GPA 3.8) anchor points. By interpolation: GPA = 3.3 + (3.8 − 3.3) × (1280 − 1200) ÷ (1400 − 1200) = 3.3 + 0.5 × 0.4 = 3.50.
Result: Alex's SAT score is equivalent to roughly a 3.50 GPA, which aligns with his actual GPA of 3.5. This consistency suggests his academic performance matches his test-taking ability. On the College Chances tab, this combination would be competitive for top 50 schools and a match for most selective universities.
Total SAT scores by Math + EBRW section combination. Green = 1400+, blue = 1200-1399.
| Math \ EBRW | 500 | 550 | 600 | 650 | 700 | 750 | 800 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500 | 1000 | 1050 | 1100 | 1150 | 1200 | 1250 | 1300 |
| 550 | 1050 | 1100 | 1150 | 1200 | 1250 | 1300 | 1350 |
| 600 | 1100 | 1150 | 1200 | 1250 | 1300 | 1350 | 1400 |
| 650 | 1150 | 1200 | 1250 | 1300 | 1350 | 1400 | 1450 |
| 700 | 1200 | 1250 | 1300 | 1350 | 1400 | 1450 | 1500 |
| 750 | 1250 | 1300 | 1350 | 1400 | 1450 | 1500 | 1550 |
| 800 | 1300 | 1350 | 1400 | 1450 | 1500 | 1550 | 1600 |
When SAT and GPA Don't Match
It's common for students to have a significant gap between their SAT-equivalent GPA and their actual GPA. Here's what that typically means:
- High SAT, Low GPA: Suggests strong aptitude but possible issues with motivation, study habits, or course engagement. Colleges may see potential but want an explanation for the GPA gap.
- Low SAT, High GPA: Could indicate strong work ethic and consistency but weaker standardized test performance. Test-optional applications or retaking the SAT may help.
- Matched SAT and GPA: The most common pattern. Colleges see a consistent academic profile, which strengthens your application.