Skip to main content
Back to Resource Library
Country & Regional Guides

Best Calculators for Students: UK and US

CalConvs Team
May 25, 2026
Country & Regional Guides

Whether you are sitting GCSEs in the UK or taking SATs in the US, studying A-Levels or AP courses, writing a university dissertation or preparing for a professional qualification, free online calculators can save you hours and help you check your working at every stage.

This guide maps the most useful free tools on CalConvs to the subjects and year groups where students need them most. All tools are available at the CalConvs home page without any registration or download.

Primary and Secondary School: Maths Foundations

Students in Years 5 to 11 in the UK, or Grades 4 to 10 in the US, build their maths foundations around arithmetic, fractions, percentages and basic algebra.

TaskRecommended Tool
Checking arithmetic answersSimple Calculator
Adding, subtracting or dividing fractionsFraction Calculator
Working with mixed numbersMixed Number Calculator
Understanding percentages for test scores and discountsPercentage Calculator
Exploring ratios and proportionRatio Calculator
Generating random numbers for class activitiesRandom Number Generator

GCSE and A-Level Maths (UK) / High School Maths (US)

At this level, students encounter more advanced algebra, statistics, trigonometry and number theory.

Science Subjects: Physics, Chemistry and Biology

Science at secondary and sixth form level involves converting units, working with logarithms and applying statistical analysis to data.

University Level: Statistics and Research Methods

University courses in psychology, sociology, business, economics, biology, geography and many other subjects require statistical competence. These tools help students check calculations and understand what the numbers mean.

Personal Finance for Students

Student loans, budgeting and planning for life after university are all areas where financial calculators help young people make better decisions.

  • Discount Calculator: for understanding the real price of student discounts on subscriptions, rail cards and shopping
  • Inflation Calculator: understanding how the cost of living changes, relevant for economics and personal budgeting
  • Percentage Calculator: for working out loan interest percentages and grade calculations

Health and PE

Physical education, sports science and health studies at A-Level and university level involve body composition, energy expenditure and exercise physiology.

Tips for Using Calculators Effectively in Study

  1. Always understand the method before using a calculator. Knowing what the calculator does means you can spot when an answer looks wrong.
  2. Enter values carefully. A wrong input produces a wrong output even if the formula is correct.
  3. Use the calculator to check your hand-calculated work, not to replace it entirely.
  4. Read the output carefully. Make sure the unit shown matches what the question is asking for.

Related Tools for Students

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these calculators allowed in UK exams?

No. Physical exam environments (GCSEs, A-Levels, university exams) do not permit web-based calculators. These tools are for learning, homework, coursework and self-study outside of formal examinations. For exams, you will need an approved physical calculator such as a Casio FX-series scientific calculator.

What is the best calculator for A-Level maths?

For physical exam use, the Casio FX-991EX or FX-991CW are widely recommended for A-Level maths and are approved for most UK exams. For checking working, exploring concepts and revision at home, the free tools on CalConvs cover every topic from the A-Level maths and further maths specification.

Which statistics tools are most useful for a psychology degree?

The most frequently needed tools in an undergraduate psychology degree are the Standard Deviation Calculator, Z-Score Calculator, Confidence Interval Calculator and Sample Size Calculator. These cover the core inferential statistics taught in research methods modules. For more advanced analyses involving multiple variables, dedicated statistical software like SPSS, R or JASP is required.

Can I use these tools for university coursework?

Yes, for checking your calculations and understanding concepts. In coursework, you will typically need to show your working and cite the methods you used. If you use a calculator result in a report, describe the formula used (for example, the Mifflin-St Jeor equation for BMR calculations) rather than just citing a website. Always follow your institution's academic integrity guidelines.

Last updated on 5/25/2026