Slugging Percentage Calculator
Free Slugging percentage Calculator for baseball. Enter your stats to get performance metrics and improvement targets.
Formula
SLG = (1B + 2x2B + 3x3B + 4xHR) / AB
Slugging percentage equals total bases divided by at-bats. Total bases are calculated by weighting singles (1), doubles (2), triples (3), and home runs (4). OPS adds on-base percentage to slugging. Isolated power (ISO) = SLG - AVG.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Power Hitter Season Line
Problem: In 500 at-bats: 95 singles, 30 doubles, 5 triples, 25 home runs. Also 60 walks, 5 HBP, 4 sac flies. Calculate SLG, AVG, OBP, and OPS.
Solution: Total Hits = 95 + 30 + 5 + 25 = 155\nTotal Bases = 95(1) + 30(2) + 5(3) + 25(4) = 95 + 60 + 15 + 100 = 270\nSLG = 270 / 500 = .540\nAVG = 155 / 500 = .310\nOBP = (155 + 60 + 5) / (500 + 60 + 5 + 4) = 220/569 = .387\nOPS = .387 + .540 = .927\nISO = .540 - .310 = .230
Result: SLG: .540 | AVG: .310 | OBP: .387 | OPS: .927 (All-Star Level)
Example 2: Contact Hitter Comparison
Problem: In 550 at-bats: 140 singles, 25 doubles, 8 triples, 5 home runs. Calculate slugging percentage and isolated power.
Solution: Total Hits = 140 + 25 + 8 + 5 = 178\nTotal Bases = 140(1) + 25(2) + 8(3) + 5(4) = 140 + 50 + 24 + 20 = 234\nSLG = 234 / 550 = .425\nAVG = 178 / 550 = .324\nISO = .425 - .324 = .101\nDespite high batting average, low ISO reveals limited power.
Result: SLG: .425 | AVG: .324 | ISO: .101 (Low power despite high average)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is slugging percentage and how is it calculated?
Slugging percentage (SLG) measures a batter's power and extra-base hit ability by calculating the total number of bases achieved per at-bat. The formula is: SLG = Total Bases / At-Bats, where total bases equal singles times 1, plus doubles times 2, plus triples times 3, plus home runs times 4. Unlike batting average which treats all hits equally, slugging percentage weights extra-base hits according to their value. A player who hits exclusively home runs would have a slugging percentage of 4.000 (the theoretical maximum), while a player with only singles would have a slugging percentage equal to their batting average. The MLB average slugging percentage typically falls between 0.390 and 0.420. Elite power hitters regularly exceed 0.550, and the all-time single-season record is Barry Bonds' remarkable 0.863 from 2001.
What is the difference between slugging percentage and batting average?
Batting average and slugging percentage both measure offensive performance but from fundamentally different perspectives. Batting average equals total hits divided by at-bats, treating every hit the same, whether it is a bunt single or a towering home run. Slugging percentage weights each hit by the number of bases gained, giving credit for extra-base power. Consider two players with identical 0.300 batting averages: Player A hits 150 singles in 500 at-bats (SLG = 0.300), while Player B hits 80 singles, 40 doubles, 5 triples, and 25 home runs in 500 at-bats (SLG = 0.540). Batting average rates them equally, but slugging percentage reveals Player B is dramatically more productive. This is why modern analytics prefer OPS (on-base plus slugging) over batting average for evaluating hitters, as it captures both the ability to reach base and the ability to hit for power.
How has slugging percentage changed throughout baseball history?
Slugging percentage has fluctuated significantly across baseball eras, reflecting changes in equipment, rules, playing conditions, and player development. During the dead-ball era before 1920, league-average slugging percentages hovered around 0.300 to 0.330 because the ball was softer and rarely replaced during games. Babe Ruth revolutionized the game in the 1920s, and the live-ball era saw averages climb to 0.380 to 0.400. The steroid era of the late 1990s and early 2000s produced the highest league-wide slugging percentages in history, peaking around 0.437 in 2000. Following enhanced drug testing, slugging declined to 0.399 by 2014. Recent years have seen a resurgence in power due to launch angle optimization and exit velocity awareness, with players deliberately engineering their swings for maximum power output rather than batting average.
How accurate are the results from Slugging Percentage Calculator?
All calculations use established mathematical formulas and are performed with high-precision arithmetic. Results are accurate to the precision shown. For critical decisions in finance, medicine, or engineering, always verify results with a qualified professional.
What formula does Slugging Percentage Calculator use?
The formula used is described in the Formula section on this page. It is based on widely accepted standards in the relevant field. If you need a specific reference or citation, the References section provides links to authoritative sources.
Can I use the results for professional or academic purposes?
You may use the results for reference and educational purposes. For professional reports, academic papers, or critical decisions, we recommend verifying outputs against peer-reviewed sources or consulting a qualified expert in the relevant field.