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🎯 AQA GCSE · 8300

AQA GCSE Mathematics Grade Predictor 2026 (8300)

Enter your AQA GCSE Mathematics mock or practice marks below. Get your predicted grade, confidence level, and exactly how many more marks you need for the next grade up. Based on official 2019–2024 boundaries (variance ±10 marks).

Enter your mock / practice marks

Enter marks for the papers you've sat. Leave blank if not yet done — we'll scale proportionally.

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⚠️ Important: Based on historical AQA GCSE Mathematics grade boundaries (2019–2024 May/June series). Actual 2026 boundaries are set by AQA after marking and may differ by ±10 marks. Always check official board publications for confirmed boundaries.

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AQA GCSE Mathematics grade predictor — FAQ

How accurate is the AQA GCSE Mathematics grade predictor?

Predictions for AQA GCSE Mathematics 8300 are based on the historical average of official grade boundaries from the 2019–2024 May/June series. The Mathematics A*/grade-9 threshold has typically varied by about ±10 marks from year to year. Use the prediction as a guide for revision planning, not a guarantee of your actual grade.

How many marks do I need for 9 in AQA GCSE Mathematics?

Historically, AQA GCSE Mathematics (8300) has needed around 196/240 marks for 9. The next grade down (8) typically opens at 175 marks. Enter your mock marks above to see exactly where your current performance sits and the gap to the next grade up.

Can I enter marks for just some Mathematics papers?

Yes — enter the papers you've sat so far and leave the others blank. The tool scales your total proportionally to 240 marks (the full AQA GCSE Mathematics 8300 mark total) and surfaces a partial-prediction warning so you know it's an estimate.

What's the difference between this and the AQA GCSE Mathematics Grade Boundary Tracker?

The AQA GCSE Mathematics Grade Boundary Tracker shows you year-by-year published boundaries — useful for looking up a specific past paper's grade. The Grade Predictor takes your mock marks across all papers, combines them, and gives you a forward-looking prediction with marks-to-next-grade guidance.

How is AQA GCSE Mathematics 8300 structured?

AQA GCSE Mathematics 8300 is assessed over 3 components: Paper 1 (Non-calculator) (80 marks); Paper 2 (Calculator) (80 marks); Paper 3 (Calculator) (80 marks). The total for the qualification is 240 marks. Enter your marks per component above for the most accurate prediction.