Matric Marks Calculator
Use this free matric marks calculator to find your overall percentage and grade. Enter each subject with the marks you obtained and the total possible marks, and the tool returns the per-subject percentage and grade along with the overall figure. It uses the standard Pakistani board grading scheme and works for matric, FA, FSc, and any exam with a total-mark scheme.
Enter your subjects
The grade bands shown match the most common Pakistani board scheme used by FBISE, Punjab, Sindh, KP, Balochistan, and AJK boards. Some boards use slightly different boundaries or apply moderation to the raw marks. If a single percentage point matters, verify against the published gazette of your specific board.
Everything you need to calculate matric percentage
Six features that cover Pakistani board exams without complexity or signups.
Per-subject percentages
See the percentage and grade for each subject as well as the overall figure.
Pakistani board grade bands
A+ (80+), A (70-79.99), B (60-69.99), C (50-59.99), D (40-49.99), Fail (below 40), the bands used by FBISE and provincial boards.
Mixed subject totals
Handles subjects with different maximum marks (75, 100, 150) correctly. The overall weights by the total possible.
Unlimited subjects
Add or remove subject rows on demand. Works for matric (9th and 10th), FA, FSc, and other exams with a total-mark scheme.
100% private, runs in browser
Your marks stay on your device. Nothing is sent to a server, logged, or shared.
Mobile-friendly layout
Clean responsive design that works on phones, tablets, and desktops.
Who uses a matric marks calculator?
Anyone interpreting a Pakistani board exam result.
Calculating overall matric percentage
Combine 9th and 10th class subject totals into a single overall percentage for board result purposes.
FA, FSc, and intermediate
Works for any Pakistani board exam that uses raw marks against a maximum total.
Predicting board grade
Estimate your overall grade and compare with the cut-offs for first division (60+) and distinction (80+).
College admission planning
Check whether your percentage meets a target college's merit list cut-off, which often sits between 75 and 90 percent.
Modelling pending subjects
Enter the subjects you have already sat and add expected scores for the remaining papers to see your projected overall.
Parents tracking results
Parents and tutors use the calculator to interpret marks slips and see at a glance how each subject affects the overall.
About matric marks and grading
A clear guide to Pakistani board grades, divisions, and how to read your result.
How matric marks are calculated
The board takes your raw obtained marks per subject and sums them, then divides by the sum of total marks across all subjects, and multiplies by 100 to get an overall percentage. Each subject can have a different total (commonly 75 or 100, sometimes 150). The calculator does exactly this: per-subject totals and obtained, summed, divided, multiplied by 100.
Pakistani board grade bands
The widely used grade scheme runs A+ for 80 percent and above, A for 70 to 79.99, B for 60 to 69.99, C for 50 to 59.99, D for 40 to 49.99, and Fail for anything below 40. Some boards use a slightly different scheme; check the gazette for your specific board if a borderline grade matters. The calculator uses the most common scheme above.
Divisions on the Pakistani scale
First division traditionally starts at 60 percent. Second division covers 45 to 59.99 percent. Third division is 33 to 44.99 percent (the old passing mark) or 40 to 49.99 percent on the newer scheme. Many universities and colleges still ask for division on the application form, so the percentage figure from the calculator translates directly into the division you can claim.
Combining 9th and 10th class
Pakistani boards typically combine 9th-class and 10th-class marks for the final matric percentage. The simplest way to use the calculator is to enter each year as a single row: one row for 9th class total (obtained and total) and one for 10th class total. The overall percentage will match what the board prints on the matric certificate.
Different subject totals
Boards use a mix of subject totals. English and Urdu papers are usually 100 marks each. Maths and the sciences are often 75 plus 25 practical (totalling 100). General science or computer subjects sometimes carry 75 or 100. The calculator handles any combination correctly because the overall is weighted by the total possible, not by an equal-weight average.
The role of practical marks
Most science subjects in matric include a practical component, often 25 marks added to the 75-mark theory paper to make a 100-mark subject. You can enter the practical and theory separately as two rows with their own totals, or combine them into one row. Both approaches give the same overall percentage.
Bonus marks for Hifz-e-Quran
Some Pakistani boards add 20 bonus marks for students who have completed Hifz-e-Quran. The mechanism varies: some boards add it inside the calculation, others add it as a flat bonus after the percentage is calculated. If your board uses the inside method, add a row for the 20-mark bonus. If it uses the after method, calculate the overall first and add the bonus afterward.
College admission cut-offs in Pakistan
Public sector colleges often start their merit lists at 75 percent for general groups, with higher cut-offs for pre-medical (often 85 to 92 percent) and pre-engineering at top colleges. Private colleges typically have lower cut-offs. Compare the calculator's overall percentage with the published cut-offs for any college you are aiming for.
What to do with a borderline result
If your overall sits one or two marks below a grade boundary, you may be eligible to apply for a re-checking of marks. This is a board-level process, not a re-marking; the board confirms whether the addition on your paper is correct. Forms and deadlines for re-checking are published on each board's website shortly after the result is announced.
Frequently asked questions
If you don't find your question here, ask us directly.
It adds up the marks you obtained across all subjects, adds up the totals possible, and divides one by the other to get a single overall percentage. For example, 425 obtained out of 550 possible is 425/550 * 100 = 77.27 percent. The calculator does this live as you fill in the table, so you can change any subject and see the overall update instantly.
Pakistani boards typically use these bands: A+ for 80 percent and above, A for 70 to 79.99, B for 60 to 69.99, C for 50 to 59.99, D for 40 to 49.99, and Fail below 40. The calculator shows the grade for each subject and the overall grade based on these bands. Some boards use slightly different boundaries, so check yours if a single percentage point matters.
It matters and the calculator handles it. Enter the actual total for each subject (the maximum marks for that paper). The overall percentage is based on the sum of all totals, so a 150-mark paper has more influence on the overall than a 75-mark paper. This is exactly how the boards calculate it.
It works for matric (9th and 10th), intermediate (11th and 12th), and any other exam that uses raw marks out of a total. You can also use it for university courses that grade out of percentages. The math is the same. The grade bands (A+, A, B, etc.) are the matric and intermediate bands used by Pakistani boards.
Pakistani boards usually combine your 9th-class and 10th-class marks for the final matric percentage. Add the obtained marks from both years and divide by the combined totals. The calculator can do this if you enter both years subject by subject, but a simpler workflow is to enter the totals: one row for 9th class total and one for 10th class total.
In Pakistan, 60 percent and above is generally first division. 45 to 59.99 is second division and 33 to 44.99 is third division (the passing cut-off is 33 percent on the old scale, 40 percent on newer schemes). Many universities and colleges still ask for division on the application form, so the percentage figure from the calculator translates directly.
Yes. Add the practical and theory as separate subjects, each with its own total, or combine them into a single subject row with the combined obtained and combined total. Both methods give the same overall percentage as long as the totals match the actual board scheme.
Some Pakistani boards add 20 bonus marks for Hifz-e-Quran. Enter it as an extra row with the obtained as 20 and the total as 20 if you want to include the boost. Some boards add bonus marks outside the percentage calculation; if so, leave it out of the calculator and add it after the overall percentage is known.
Use the "Add subject" button to insert a row and the × button on the right of any row to remove it. The overall figures update instantly each time you change anything. Start with the standard matric subjects and add or remove rows as needed for your specific board scheme.
Public sector colleges in Pakistan often start at 75 to 80 percent for general groups, with higher cut-offs for pre-medical and pre-engineering streams (sometimes 85 percent and above at competitive colleges). Private colleges accept lower percentages. Use the calculator to model the percentage you need based on subjects still to be sat.
Yes. Your subject names and marks stay in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server, logged, or shared. You can use the calculator without an account and even offline once the page has loaded.
The calculator only uses the raw marks you enter, so if the board has not yet applied a relative scale or moderation, the percentage shown will match the published board result for the same raw marks. If your board has already moderated your marks, enter the moderated figures, not the raw ones.
Yes. The Federal Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (FBISE) and the provincial boards (Punjab, Sindh, KP, Balochistan, AJK) all use a similar percentage and grade structure. The calculator works for all of them. The grade bands shown match the most common scheme; if your board publishes a slightly different scheme, your grade may be one band different at the boundary.
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