⚾ BABIP Calculator
Estimate how often a hitter’s balls in play fall for hits.
Batting line input
BABIP = (H – HR) ÷ (AB – K – HR + SF). It separates what happens on balls in play from strikeouts and home runs.
BABIP result
Result readNo BABIP has been calculated yet. Enter the batting line and click Calculate.
No BABIP has been calculated yet. Enter the batting line and click Calculate.
Recent calculations
BABIP is one of those baseball stats that turns a box score into a better conversation. It does not tell you everything about a hitter, but it helps explain whether a batting average is being supported by balls finding grass, hard contact, speed, or a stretch of good or bad luck.
How American baseball fans use BABIP
For MLB fans, fantasy baseball managers, coaches, and data-minded players, BABIP is most useful when it is paired with context. A hitter with a .360 BABIP and strong line-drive numbers may be earning it. A hitter with the same BABIP on soft contact may be riding a streak that could cool off.
What to compare next
- Line-drive rate and hard-hit rate for contact quality.
- Sprint speed and infield-hit profile for speed-driven BABIP.
- Strikeout rate, because fewer balls in play means more volatility.
- Park, defense, and sample size before making a roster decision.
Use the calculator without overreacting
A single week can mislead. A month is better. A full season is stronger. Use the result as a scouting note: “Should I look deeper?” rather than as a final verdict on a player.
Formula reminder
BABIP = (H – HR) ÷ (AB – K – HR + SF). Home runs and strikeouts are removed because the defense never turns those balls in play into hits or outs.