Calculate Batting Average (BA)
Calculate batting average from hits and at-bats. See how your average compares to MLB standards.
How Batting Average Is Calculated
BA = Hits ÷ At-Bats. It is always expressed as a three-decimal number — .283 means 283 hits per 1,000 at-bats (28.3% success rate). Batting average does not count walks, hit-by-pitches, sacrifices, or errors — only actual hits divided by at-bats. On-Base Percentage (OBP) is a better overall measure because it includes walks: OBP = (H + BB + HBP) ÷ (AB + BB + HBP + SF).
What Is a Good Batting Average?
.300+: Excellent — All-Star level, only ~20-30 players per season. .270-.300: Above average, solid everyday player. .250-.270: League average. .220-.250: Below average but may contribute power/defense. Below .200: The "Mendoza Line" — below this, a player job is in jeopardy. The MLB-wide batting average has hovered around .240-.250 in recent years, down from .270+ in the early 2000s.
Batting average calculator gets seasonal traffic (March-October) from fantasy baseball players and youth coaches. During MLB season, related searches like "what is a good batting average" spike 300%.