System Usability Scale Calculator for Engineering Teams

Score SUS surveys with clear engineering-focused feedback. View item trends, grades, and usability ranges instantly. Share findings quickly with exports, charts, and practical summaries.

SUS Input Form

Complete all ten statements using the standard 1–5 response scale. Results appear above this form after submission.

1
Strongly Disagree
2
Disagree
3
Neutral
4
Agree
5
Strongly Agree
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Reset Form

Example Data Table

The table below shows sample respondent inputs and final SUS scores for quick reference.

Respondent Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 SUS Score
Tester A 4242524152 82.5
Tester B 3333433343 55.0
Tester C 5152415251 92.5

Formula Used

The System Usability Scale uses ten items rated from 1 to 5. Odd-numbered items are positive statements, and even-numbered items are negative statements.

This converts the score to a 0–100 scale. Higher scores indicate better perceived usability.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the system name, study label, benchmark, and optional previous score.
  2. Rate all ten SUS statements from 1 to 5.
  3. Click Calculate SUS Score to generate the score.
  4. Review the score, grade, acceptability, benchmark gap, and item-level contributions.
  5. Use the chart to identify which items improved or weakened the experience.
  6. Download CSV or PDF outputs for engineering reviews, audits, or design reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does the SUS score measure?

It measures perceived usability from a short standardized questionnaire. The score reflects how easy, consistent, and confidence-building the system feels to respondents.

2. Is a higher SUS score always better?

Yes. Higher scores generally indicate stronger usability. Teams often compare releases, prototypes, or competitor workflows using the same scoring method.

3. Why are even-numbered items reversed?

Even items are negatively worded. Reversing them keeps all adjusted contributions aligned so stronger usability always raises the final score.

4. Is 68 still a useful benchmark?

It is widely used as a practical average reference point. Still, your own historical scores and domain-specific expectations should guide final decisions.

5. Can I score one respondent at a time?

Yes. This calculator scores one response set per submission. For team studies, average several respondent scores to make stronger conclusions.

6. What does response variation tell me?

Variation shows how spread out the answers were. Higher variation can signal uneven experiences, confusing flows, or uncertainty across items.

7. Should SUS replace qualitative usability testing?

No. SUS summarizes perception efficiently, but comments, observations, and task success data explain why the score moved.

8. What are CSV and PDF exports useful for?

They help store results, share findings with stakeholders, and attach evidence to engineering reviews, release notes, and usability documentation.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.