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IB Global Politics Grade Boundaries

View IB grade boundaries for Global Politics HL and SL across recent and past exam sessions. Compare historical changes in grade boundaries and explore detailed statistics, including candidate numbers and grade distributions.

Points needed
GradePaper 1Paper 2Internal AssessmentFinal Grade
7
18-2528-5016-2064-100%
6
15-1723-2714-1554-63%
5
13-1418-2211-1343-53%
4
10-1213-179-1033-42%
3
7-98-126-821-32%
2
4-64-73-510-20%
1
0-30-30-20-9%
Global Politics Grade Boundaries Over Time
Historical Thresholds
Session765432
Nov 25
67%
56%
43%
32%
21%
9%
May 25
65%
-2
55%
-1
44%
+1
35%
+3
24%
+3
11%
+2
Nov 24
67%
56%
43%
32%
21%
9%
May 24
63%
53%
43%
33%
22%
10%
Nov 23
64%
55%
43%
33%
22%
10%
May 23
64%
54%
43%
33%
22%
10%
Nov 22
57%
49%
39%
31%
21%
10%
May 22
57%
47%
35%
27%
17%
7%
Nov 21
53%
45%
34%
27%
16%
7%
May 21
59%
49%
38%
29%
19%
7%
Nov 20
64%
52%
40%
28%
18%
8%
Nov 19
69%
60%
46%
37%
23%
11%
May 19
68%
58%
44%
33%
21%
9%
* Note: Red and green values show the change in the minimum percentage required to achieve that grade compared to the immediate previous session.
Session Snapshot

Total candidates

3,503


Highest grade %

7.6%

Grade Distribution

Grade 7

7.6%

Grade 6

19.6%

Grade 5

29.7%

Grade 4

23.5%

Grade 3

11.5%

Grade 2

3.4%

Grade 1

0.2%

N

4.6%

Frequently Asked Questions

No. IB grade boundaries can change from one exam session to another. The IB reviews the difficulty of each examination and adjusts boundaries to ensure grading standards remain consistent over time. As a result, the score needed for a particular grade in Global Politics may be slightly higher or lower than in previous years.

The grade boundaries for Global Politics shown on this page are taken directly from official documents published by the International Baccalaureate (IB). They reflect the official grade boundaries used for the selected examination session and can be considered fully accurate.

Not completely. The IB uses different exam time zones (typically TZ1 and TZ2) for some subjects, and students in different time zones may sit different paper variants. In these cases, grade boundaries are set separately for each time zone and paper combination, so they can differ slightly. However, within the same time zone and exam version, all students are graded using the same grade boundaries.

To achieve a grade 7 in Global Politics, you need at least 64 out of 100 marks (64%) in this exam session, according to official IB grade boundaries.

Most universities consider a grade 6–7 in IB Global Politics a strong result. A 7 is excellent, a 6 is very strong, and a 5 is a solid pass demonstrating good understanding.

Grade boundaries are set after marking based on student performance in that exam session. The IB adjusts them each year so that grades reflect overall performance: if an exam is harder, boundaries are lowered, and if it is easier, boundaries are raised. This ensures a consistent distribution of grades across different sessions.

Yes. Grade boundaries can be a useful tool for estimating your final grade if you know your likely marks on each assessment component. However, predictions are never guaranteed because your final result depends on your actual Global Politics exam and coursework scores, as well as the official grade boundaries for your exam session.