Engineering Aggregate / Semester Calculator

What Is an Engineering Aggregate Calculator?

An Engineering Aggregate Calculator computes your B.E./B.Tech CGPA from semester-wise SGPA and credit data, then converts it to aggregate percentage and division class. To calculate engineering CGPA, use the formula: CGPA = Σ(SGPA × Credits) ÷ Σ(Credits), taking each semester's SGPA weighted by its credit hours. For example, if your 4 semesters had SGPAs 8.5, 8.2, 8.7, 9.0 with credits 24, 24, 26, 22, your CGPA = (8.5×24 + 8.2×24 + 8.7×26 + 9.0×22) / 96 = 8.91. This Engineering Aggregate Calculator is used by B.Tech students from AICTE / Anna University / JNTU / VTU / MAKAUT for placements, higher studies (GATE M.Tech, MS abroad), and government job applications.

Engineering CGPA Calculation Formula

CGPA = Σ(SGPA × Credits) ÷ Σ(Credits)

CGPA-to-percentage conversion (3 standards used by Indian engineering universities):

AICTE: % = (CGPA − 0.75) × 10 Anna Univ / VTU / JNTU: % = CGPA × 10 CBSE-style: % = CGPA × 9.5

Choose the formula your university uses — it's specified in your transcript or convocation booklet.

Example Calculation

Example: B.Tech CSE 4 Semesters Aggregate (AICTE)

Semester data:

• Sem 1: SGPA 8.5, Credits 24

• Sem 2: SGPA 8.2, Credits 24

• Sem 3: SGPA 8.7, Credits 26

• Sem 4: SGPA 9.0, Credits 22

Calculation:

Σ(SGPA × Credits) = 8.5×24 + 8.2×24 + 8.7×26 + 9.0×22 = 204 + 196.8 + 226.2 + 198 = 825

Σ(Credits) = 24 + 24 + 26 + 22 = 96

CGPA = 825 / 96 = 8.59

AICTE Aggregate % = (8.59 − 0.75) × 10 = 78.4%

CGPA: 8.59 • Aggregate %: 78.4% • Division: First Class with Distinction

Enter Your Semester Data

Cumulative CGPA
--
Total Credits0
Aggregate Percentage--
Division / Class--
Formula UsedAICTE
Note: Use AICTE for most central / engineering colleges; check your university transcript.

When to Use This Engineering Aggregate Calculator

💼
Placement Eligibility

Check eligibility for TCS, Infosys, Wipro (60%+) and product companies (75%+ / 8.0+ CGPA).

🎓
M.Tech / MS Applications

Compute aggregate for GATE M.Tech / MS in US / Germany applications.

🇮🇳
Government Jobs

SSC, IBPS, RRB, PSU exams require aggregate % — quick conversion for forms.

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Semester Tracking

Track current CGPA after each semester to plan target SGPA for upcoming terms.

CGPA / Percentage to Class Reference

CGPA (10-pt)AICTE %Anna/VTU %Class / Division
9.0 – 10.082.5 – 92.590 – 100Outstanding / Distinction
8.0 – 8.9972.5 – 82.480 – 89.9First Class with Distinction
7.0 – 7.9962.5 – 72.470 – 79.9First Class
6.0 – 6.9952.5 – 62.460 – 69.9First Class (lower)
5.5 – 5.9947.5 – 52.455 – 59.9Second Class
4.5 – 5.4937.5 – 47.445 – 54.9Pass
Below 4.5Below 37.5Below 45Fail / Backlog

Limitations and Notes

Frequently Asked Questions

Engineering aggregate CGPA is usually a weighted average of semester SGPAs. Formula with values: Let A = SGPA, B = semester credits, C = A x B, and D = total credits. Example: Semester 1 has SGPA 8.0 and 22 credits, so C = 176. Semester 2 has SGPA 7.5 and 24 credits, so C = 180. Total C = 356 and D = 46. Aggregate CGPA = C / D = 356 / 46 = 7.74. Use your university's rule for excluding failed or repeated courses.
To calculate aggregate marks, add marks obtained across the subjects or semesters included by the university. Formula with values: Let A = total marks obtained and B = total maximum marks. Aggregate percentage = (A / B) x 100. Example: if marks obtained are 720, 680, 750, and 700 out of 1000 each, then A = 2850 and B = 4000. Aggregate = (2850 / 4000) x 100 = 71.25%. Check whether labs, projects, backlogs, and electives are included.
Engineering aggregate percentage is calculated from all included marks or from CGPA conversion, depending on university rules. Formula with values: If marks are available, let A = total obtained marks and B = total maximum marks. Percentage = (A / B) x 100. Example: A = 6120 and B = 8000, so percentage = 76.5%. If only CGPA is used, let C = aggregate CGPA and apply the official conversion, such as C x 9.5 or a university formula. Use the method printed in your academic regulations.
Engineering aggregate means combining performance across semesters, subjects, or years according to the university rule. Formula with values: For marks, let A = total marks obtained and B = total maximum marks. Aggregate = (A / B) x 100. Example: 6500 / 8000 x 100 = 81.25%. For CGPA, let C = each semester SGPA and D = credits; aggregate CGPA = sum(C x D) / sum(D). Always check whether first year, backlogs, internal marks, practicals, and final-year project are included.
First find out what your university means by aggregate: all semesters, best years, major subjects, or only final-year marks. Formula with values: If it is marks-based, let A = obtained marks and B = maximum marks. Aggregate percentage = (A / B) x 100. Example: A = 5400 and B = 7200, so aggregate = 75%. If it is credit-based, let C = SGPA and D = credits; aggregate CGPA = sum(C x D) / sum(D). Use the official regulation, not a friend's formula.
Aggregate in engineering means the combined academic result across selected subjects, semesters, or years. It may be shown as total percentage, aggregate CGPA, or class/division. Example values: Let A = marks from all included semesters and B = maximum marks. Aggregate percentage = (A / B) x 100. If A = 6200 and B = 8000, aggregate = 77.5%. If your college uses credits, aggregate CGPA = total credit points / total credits. The exact subjects included depend on university rules.
+2 aggregate marks usually mean the combined marks from Class 11-12 or higher secondary subjects used for eligibility, depending on the admission rule. Formula with values: Let A = marks obtained in selected +2 subjects and B = maximum marks in those subjects. Aggregate percentage = (A / B) x 100. Example: Physics 85, Chemistry 80, Maths 90; A = 255 and B = 300. Aggregate = 255 / 300 x 100 = 85%. Some colleges require PCM aggregate, while others include English or best subjects.
Aggregate marks are the total marks obtained after adding the subjects or semesters required by a rule. Formula with values: Let A = marks in subject 1, B = marks in subject 2, C = marks in subject 3, and D = total maximum marks. Aggregate marks = A + B + C. Aggregate percentage = (A + B + C) / D x 100. Example: 80 + 75 + 85 = 240 out of 300, so aggregate percentage = 80%. Always know which subjects must be included.
50% marks in aggregate means the combined score across required subjects is half of the total maximum marks. Formula with values: Let A = total marks obtained and B = total maximum marks. Aggregate percentage = (A / B) x 100. If B = 1000, then 50% aggregate means A = (50 / 100) x 1000 = 500 marks. It does not always mean 50% in every subject; one subject may be higher and another lower, unless the rule also requires individual subject minimums.

Inputs Explained

Limitations & Notes

Sources & References

  1. All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE). "Model Curriculum & Credit Framework for B.Tech." aicte-india.org, 2024.
  2. University Grants Commission (UGC). "Choice Based Credit System (CBCS) Guidelines." ugc.ac.in, 2023.
  3. Anna University. "Academic Regulations 2019 (R-2019) — Grading & CGPA." annauniv.edu, 2024.
  4. Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU). "Academic Regulations." vtu.ac.in, 2024.
  5. Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University (JNTU). "B.Tech Examination Regulations." jntuh.ac.in, 2024.
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