OCR A-level · H567

OCR A-level Psychology grade calculator

Calculate the mark needed across the remaining OCR A-level Psychology papers.

Marks-needed calculator

A-level

300 marks total

Simple mode uses the spread of the June 2023–2025 boundaries. In-depth mode adds an exact-year option and fuller grade analysis.

1. Choose a boundary set
2. Choose the target grade
3. Who marked the papers?

The self-marked option also calculates a cautious result after reducing entered marks by 10%. This is a planning allowance for uncertain marking.

4. Enter completed or estimated paper marks

Leave a paper empty when it is still to come. Enter 0 when the paper has been completed with a mark of zero.

Assessment structure

OCR A-level Psychology: A-level

ComponentMaximum markShare of total
Research methods (01)9030.0%
Psychological themes through core studies (02)10535.0%
Applied psychology (03)10535.0%
Total300100%

Official OCR specification

Boundary trends

How grade boundaries have moved

Lines show each boundary as a percentage of the qualification total. The gap from 2019 to 2022 covers the pandemic years, when normal summer examinations did not take place in 2020 or 2021. Summer 2022 used transitional grading arrangements.

OCR A-level Psychology historical grade-boundary trends Grade boundaries for A*, A, B, C from June 2019 and June 2022 to 2025. 35% 40% 45% 50% 55% 60% 65% 70% 75% 80% 85% 2019 2022 2023 2024 2025 No normal summer exams in 2020–21 Grade A*: 74.3% in 2019 Grade A*: 71.0% in 2022 Grade A*: 74.0% in 2023 Grade A*: 76.3% in 2024 Grade A*: 74.0% in 2025 Grade A: 66.7% in 2019 Grade A: 63.0% in 2022 Grade A: 67.0% in 2023 Grade A: 69.7% in 2024 Grade A: 66.7% in 2025 Grade B: 56.7% in 2019 Grade B: 52.3% in 2022 Grade B: 56.7% in 2023 Grade B: 59.0% in 2024 Grade B: 56.0% in 2025 Grade C: 47.0% in 2019 Grade C: 42.0% in 2022 Grade C: 46.3% in 2023 Grade C: 48.3% in 2024 Grade C: 45.3% in 2025
Grade A*Grade AGrade BGrade C 2022 transitional grading

Reading the pandemic-era data

There are no ordinary June 2020 or June 2021 boundaries because GCSE and A-level grades were awarded without the normal summer exam series. June 2022 was a transition year with grading set between 2019 and pre-pandemic standards. The default calculator therefore uses 2023–2025 for its recent range and keeps 2022 available for historical comparison.

Published data

Historical qualification boundaries

Minimum total marks for A-level. A dash means the grade is unavailable for that entry option.

June seriesMaximumA*ABCDESource
202530022220016813610473Official file
202430022920917714511483Official file
202330022220117013910979Official file
2022Transitional grading3002131891571269564Official file
201930022320017014111283Official file

Checked against the awarding organisation’s published subject-level boundary files. See the data notes.

What the answer means

The calculation adds all entered component marks and subtracts that total from the selected qualification boundary. Empty components supply the remaining available marks. The recent-range view repeats the calculation using June 2023, June 2024 and June 2025.

Self-marked work receives an additional cautious calculation using 90% of the entered marks. It gives a wider planning range where mark-scheme interpretation may be uncertain. It does not alter the marks entered or claim a measured error rate for any individual student.