CGPA to Percentage Conversion Certificate

Generate a clean, printable document showing your CGPA, its equivalent percentage, and the exact official formula your university publishes — with the source cited. For attaching to job forms, transcripts, and applications.

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Fill in your name, university, and CGPA — your certificate appears here.

The free preview is watermarked. Unlock once (₹49) to download a clean PDF certificate. Double-check your name, university and CGPA — the certificate is generated exactly as entered and cannot be edited after payment. By unlocking you agree to our Terms, Refund Policy & Delivery Policy.

What this certificate is (and isn't)

This is a self-generated document that states your CGPA, the equivalent percentage, and the exact conversion formula your university publishes, with the source regulation cited. It's meant to accompany a job application, a transcript, or an admission form where someone needs to see how your CGPA maps to a percentage.

It is not an official university-issued certificate. GradeKar is an independent tool. If an employer or institution needs an official conversion certificate stamped by the university, request it from your examination department. Many students attach this alongside that request to show the working.

When you need a CGPA-to-percentage conversion certificate

Most Indian marksheets print a CGPA, but a lot of forms ask for a percentage. A short document that shows the conversion and the official formula behind it saves an argument later. It's commonly needed for:

  • Job applications. TCS NQT, Infosys, Wipro and most service companies filter on "60% throughout" and ask you to type a percentage. A certificate shows how your CGPA maps to that number.
  • PSU / government recruitment. Many GATE-based PSU and SSC forms need a readable percentage on record.
  • Higher studies abroad. WES and university applications compare your percentage against the marksheet — a cited conversion helps.
  • Bank loans and visa paperwork. Where a percentage has to be stated explicitly.

How the percentage is calculated

There is no single national formula. Each university publishes its own, and they differ: some multiply CGPA by 10, some subtract before multiplying, some use 9.5. GradeKar applies your university's exact official formula and cites the source regulation on the certificate, so the number is defensible. Pick your university above to use the right one.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a CGPA to percentage conversion certificate?

It's a short document that states your CGPA, the equivalent percentage, and the exact official formula your university uses to convert between them, with the source regulation cited. Students attach it to job forms, transcripts, and applications where a percentage is required but the marksheet only prints a CGPA.

Is this an official university certificate?

No. It is a self-generated document that shows the conversion using your university's published formula. GradeKar is an independent tool, not affiliated with any university. For an officially stamped certificate, request one from your university's examination department — many students attach this alongside to show the working.

How much does it cost?

You can generate and preview the full certificate for free (with a watermark). The clean, watermark-free PDF download is a one-time ₹49.

Which universities are supported?

The certificate covers the Indian universities GradeKar has verified official formulas for, including VTU, Anna University, AKTU, SPPU, MAKAUT, RGPV, JNTUH, GTU, Delhi University, SRM, VIT, Amity and Calcutta University. Each uses its own official conversion formula.

Can I use it for job applications or study abroad?

Yes — that's the main use. It documents how your CGPA converts to a percentage for placement forms (TCS NQT, Infosys, Wipro), PSU recruitment, WES and university applications abroad, bank loans, and visa paperwork. It shows the formula and source, though it is not a university-stamped document.

How is the percentage calculated?

Using your university's exact published formula, not a generic one. Some universities multiply CGPA by 10, some subtract 0.75 first, some use 9.5. The certificate applies the correct formula for the university you pick and cites the source regulation.