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Free Merit List Generator

Paste names and marks, get a clean sorted rank list with proper tie-handling. Runs in your browser. No signup, no upload, nothing stored.

1. Paste names and marks

One per line. Accepts Name, Marks or Name <Tab> Marks from Excel or Google Sheets.

2. Review and edit rows

NameMarksActions

3. Ranking options

Tie-handling
Sort order

Class Merit List

Add at least one row with a name and a numeric mark to see results.

Working document only. Not an official institutional credential.

How it works

Paste two columns (name and marks) into the box, or build the list row by row with the editable table. The tool parses comma-separated, tab-separated, and space-separated formats automatically, so a copy-paste straight out of Excel or Google Sheets usually works without cleaning. Lines that cannot be parsed (header rows, blank lines, notes) are skipped quietly.

The default ranking method is dense rank, which gives the most compact ordering (tied students share a rank and the next student takes the immediately following number). Toggle to standard rank when you want competition-style ranking where tied positions create a gap (1, 1, 1, 4 instead of 1, 1, 1, 2). Both methods sort by marks in descending order by default; a separate toggle flips the order to ascending if you need lowest-first.

Once you are happy with the parsed list, print directly from the browser or download a CSV for further work in a spreadsheet. The output is a plain ranked list, no institutional letterhead, no signature, no seal, just rank, name, and marks. It is a working document for teachers, not a credential.

Frequently asked questions

Both methods handle ties (students with the same marks) but assign the next rank differently. With standard rank (also called "competition" rank), tied students share a position and the next student skips ahead by the size of the tie group. For example, three students tied at first place all get rank 1, and the next student is rank 4, the sequence is 1, 1, 1, 4. With dense rank, tied students share a position but the next student takes the immediately following rank with no gap. The same three students tied at first place all get rank 1, and the next student is rank 2, the sequence is 1, 1, 1, 2. Use standard rank for prize ceremonies and competitive contexts where the gap signals scarcity; use dense rank when you want a compact ordering with no skipped numbers.

Rank thousands of students, not just one class

OpenEduCat’s gradebook handles ranking across every section and subject, applies your weighting rules consistently, publishes parent-facing rank cards, and keeps a versioned audit trail when a mark is corrected.