Calculadora de Nota Final

Find out exactly what score you need on your final exam to achieve your target grade.

🎯 Calculadora de Nota Final
Your current grade before the final exam
The overall grade you want to achieve
How much the final counts toward your total grade
You Need to Score
0%

0%
Current Calificación
0%
Target Calificación
0%
Final Weight

How the Calculadora de Nota Final Works

This calculator uses a simple but powerful formula to determine the minimum score you need on your final exam:

Final Needed = (Target − Current × (1 − Weight)) ÷ Weight

Where:

  • Target: Your desired overall grade (e.g., 85%)
  • Current: Your grade before the final (e.g., 82%)
  • Weight: How much the final counts (e.g., 0.30 for 30%)

Ejemplos Prácticos

Example 1: "Can I still get an A?"

Current grade: 88%. Target: 90% (A). Final weight: 25%.

Needed = (90 − 88 × 0.75) ÷ 0.25 = (90 − 66) ÷ 0.25 = 96%

You'd need a 96% on the final—tough but possible with focused study.

Example 2: "Can I pass?"

Current grade: 62%. Target: 60% (D). Final weight: 40%.

Needed = (60 − 62 × 0.60) ÷ 0.40 = (60 − 37.2) ÷ 0.40 = 57%

Bueno news—you only need 57% on the final to pass.

Example 3: "Already guaranteed?"

Current grade: 95%. Target: 90%. Final weight: 20%.

Needed = (90 − 95 × 0.80) ÷ 0.20 = (90 − 76) ÷ 0.20 = 70%

You could score a C on the final and still get an A overall.

Tips for Final Exam Success

  • Use this calculator early in the semester to set realistic expectations
  • If the needed score is over 100%, focus on maximizing every other assignment
  • Ask your professor about extra credit opportunities
  • Start studying at least a week before the exam
  • Form study groups and use practice exams

FAQ

This means your target grade may not be achievable with the final alone. You'd need to either lower your target or find additional ways to earn points (extra credit, improving other assignments). Talk to your professor about options.

This calculator assumes one remaining exam. If you have multiple remaining assignments, add their weights together for the "Final Weight" field. The needed score will then be the average you need across all remaining work.

Check your course syllabus. It will typically list the grading breakdown (e.g., "Final Exam: 30%"). If you can't find it, ask your professor or check your school's learning management system (Canvas, Blackboard, etc.).