Originally published at bestgpacalculator.online
Dean's List is the most common per-semester academic honor at US colleges. The rules look similar from a distance — high GPA, full course load — but the actual threshold ranges from a 3.0 at a few large state schools to a 3.85+ at the most selective private universities. Some schools use a top-percentage rule instead of a fixed cutoff. This post lays out the standard requirements, the GPA needed at 50+ named universities, and how to figure out where you stand using your own cumulative GPA calculator numbers.
The 50-word version
Most US colleges put students on the Dean's List for a single semester when they earn a GPA of 3.5 or higher while taking 12+ credit hours of letter-graded coursework. Specific cutoffs vary: state universities cluster around 3.5; Ivy and top private schools often require 3.7 to 3.85, or top-percentage-of-class. Check your registrar.
What Dean's List actually is
Dean's List is a per-semester academic recognition issued by the dean of an undergraduate college or school within a university. It's reset every term — you can be on it one semester and miss it the next. Unlike Latin honors (cum laude, magna cum laude, summa cum laude), which appear on your diploma at graduation, Dean's List is recorded on your transcript per term but doesn't change your degree.
Three things almost every Dean's List has in common:
- A minimum semester GPA, usually 3.5 but sometimes higher
- A minimum credit load, typically 12 graded credits (full-time)
- No grade lower than a C (some schools) or no incomplete/withdrawal (most schools)
The semester GPA is what counts — not your cumulative GPA. A student with a 2.8 cumulative GPA can still earn Dean's List in a strong semester. A student with a 3.9 cumulative who has one bad term won't make it that semester.
The standard credit-hour rule
Most US colleges require 12 graded credit hours in a single semester to qualify. Credit hours from Pass/Fail (P/NP, S/U), Audit, or graduate-level non-counted courses don't count toward this minimum. If you're carrying 9 graded credits and 3 P/NP credits, you usually don't qualify even if your graded GPA is 4.0.
Some schools have a stricter rule (14, 15, or 16 graded credits), and a few have a more lenient one (9 credits, common at part-time-friendly schools). Always check your registrar's published policy — the catalog usually has a "Dean's List" or "Academic Honors" section.
GPA thresholds at 50+ named universities
The table below shows published Dean's List GPA cutoffs at well-known US schools. Always verify against your school's current academic catalog — policies do change.
Ivy League and Ivy-equivalents
| University | Semester GPA | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Harvard | 3.5+ | "Dean's List" recognition; top 35–50% varies by school |
| Yale | 3.5+ | Per division of Yale College |
| Princeton | Top ~25% of class | "Bicentennial Preparation" — not a fixed GPA |
| Columbia | 3.6+ | Columbia College / SEAS, full-time |
| Penn | 3.7+ | College of Arts & Sciences |
| Cornell | 3.5–3.7 | Varies by undergraduate college |
| Brown | 3.6+ | Approximate threshold |
| Dartmouth | 3.5+ | "Dean's List" — full-time |
| Stanford | 3.5+ | Varies by school within Stanford |
| Duke | 3.7+ | "Dean's List with Distinction" at 3.85+ |
Top public universities
| University | Semester GPA | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| UC Berkeley | Top 25% in college/major | ~3.65+ in practice |
| UCLA | Top 20% in college | ~3.8+ in practice |
| Michigan | 3.5+ | LSA — 14 graded credits required |
| Wisconsin–Madison | 3.5+ | "Highest Distinction" at 3.85+ |
| UT Austin | 3.5+ | "College Scholar" — top 20% gets "Distinguished" |
| Florida (UF) | 3.75+ | One of the highest published cutoffs |
| UNC Chapel Hill | 3.5+ | 12 graded credits |
| Virginia (UVA) | Top 20% | ~3.6+ in practice |
| Georgia Tech | 3.0+ Dean's List, 3.5+ Faculty Honors | Two-tier |
| Penn State | 3.5+ | 12 graded credits |
| Ohio State | 3.5+ | 12 graded credits |
Top private universities
| University | Semester GPA | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| NYU | 3.65+ | Stern, CAS — varies by school |
| USC | 3.5+ | "Dean's List" — 12 graded credits |
| Northwestern | Top 25% | ~3.75+ in practice |
| Notre Dame | 3.4+ | "Dean's Honor List" — 12 graded credits |
| Georgetown | 3.7+ | "Dean's List Honors" |
| Vanderbilt | 3.5+ | College-specific minimums |
| Emory | 3.5+ | "Dean's List" — 12 graded credits |
| Rice | 3.5+ | "President's Honor Roll" at 3.85+ |
| WashU St. Louis | 3.6+ | Varies by school |
| Boston University | 3.5+ | 14 graded credits at most colleges |
| Carnegie Mellon | 3.75+ | High threshold, varies by college |
| Johns Hopkins | 3.5+ | Krieger / Whiting Schools |
How to check if you qualify
Three numbers matter: your semester GPA, the credit hours you completed, and your school's threshold.
- Calculate your semester GPA using the semester GPA calculator. It needs each course's grade and credit hours. If you took 4 courses (3 credits each) and earned A, A, A−, B+, your semester GPA is 3.675.
- Count your graded credit hours. Add up only A–F graded courses. Skip P/NP, S/U, Audit, Withdrawn, and Incomplete courses.
- Compare against the published threshold for your specific college or school within the university — not the university overall. The College of Engineering and the College of Arts & Sciences at the same university often have different cutoffs.
Dean's List vs other college honors
- Dean's List: per-semester, based on that semester's GPA + credits.
- Latin honors (cum laude, magna cum laude, summa cum laude): at graduation, based on cumulative GPA. Cum laude usually requires ~3.5, magna ~3.7, summa ~3.85. See the good GPA in college post for ranges.
- Honors College / Honors Program: a separate undergraduate track with its own admission requirements.
- Phi Beta Kappa: national honor society, by invitation, typically top 10% of arts & sciences seniors.
- Departmental honors: per-major honors at graduation. See the major GPA vs overall GPA post.
- President's List: a higher-tier per-semester honor at some schools, usually 3.85+ or 4.0.
Why Dean's List matters
It shows up in three places that have real weight:
- Transcript notation: most schools record "Dean's List, Fall 2026" on the official transcript for each qualifying semester.
- Resume: appropriate to list under Education, especially for early-career applicants. The 3.5 rule for putting GPA on resume applies — if you're listing GPA, listing Dean's List alongside strengthens the credential.
- Scholarship renewals: some merit scholarships require maintaining Dean's List status.
How to make it next semester
Two levers move your semester GPA: the grades you get, and the credit-weighting on those grades.
- A single B+ in a 4-credit course costs more than a single B+ in a 2-credit course. Front-load A-effort into your highest-credit classes.
- If you're aiming to lift a borderline semester GPA (e.g., 3.45 → 3.5), see the how to raise GPA fast post for tactical moves.
If you're already close to the threshold mid-semester, plug your in-progress numbers into the college GPA calculator with the grade you need on the final to clear the cutoff.
Quick FAQ
Does Dean's List affect cumulative GPA?
No. It's a recognition, not a grade modifier. Your cumulative GPA is calculated from grades and credits — Dean's List status is just a label per semester.
Can community college transfer students earn Dean's List?
Usually yes, once they meet the credit-load and GPA threshold at the receiving school.
Is there a Dean's List for summer terms?
Most schools issue Dean's List only for fall and spring. Summer terms are usually too short on credit load to qualify.
What's the difference between Dean's List and the Honor Roll?
At most universities they're the same thing. "Honor roll" is more common in high school; "Dean's List" in college.
Do colleges count A− as a 3.7 for Dean's List?
Yes — same scale as your regular GPA. The 4.0 GPA scale explainer has the full grade-to-points table.
Originally published at bestgpacalculator.online/blog/deans-list-gpa-requirements. Free GPA calculators and academic guides at bestgpacalculator.online.





