Batting Average Calculator
Calculate your baseball batting average with our precise and easy-to-use online tool. Optimize your baseball performance with accurate insights.
Input your season stats
Provide the total at-bats and hits to compute the batting average.
At bats exclude walks, hit by pitch, sacrifices, catcher interference, and obstruction. Hits count successful reaches without errors or fielder choices.
Rounded to three decimals. Always between 0.000 and 1.000.
How to Use This Calculator
Enter the total at-bats and hits for the period you want to evaluate. Click Calculate (or let the inputs update) to see your updated batting average immediately. The Reset button returns the defaults and recomputes the value.
Methodology
We use the standard baseball batting average definition: hits divided by at-bats. The calculator enforces valid ranges (at-bats > 0, hits between 0 and at-bats) so the output remains between 0.000 and 1.000, mirroring league statistics methodology.
Factors like walks, hit-by-pitch, and sacrifices are excluded because they are not counted as official at-bats in the rules book.
Glossary of Terms
- At Bats: The number of times a player has batted, excluding walks, hits by pitch, sacrifices, catcher interference, and obstruction.
- Hits: Instances when a player safely reaches first base (or beyond) after hitting the ball, without the aid of an error or fielder's choice.
- Batting Average: Offensive performance measure equal to hits divided by at-bats, presented as a decimal between 0.000 and 1.000.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is a good batting average?
.300 or higher is widely considered excellent in professional baseball.
Does a batting average include walks?
No, walks, hit-by-pitch, and sacrifices do not count as at-bats, so they are excluded from the batting average calculation.
Can a batting average be negative?
No. This calculator constrains values so the average stays between 0.000 and 1.000, matching the way batting averages are reported.
Full original guide (expanded)
All calculations are strictly based on standard baseball statistics methodology. For additional context, consult Baseball Reference, the authoritative source on historical player statistics.