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How-to guide

How to Calculate Cricket Batting Average: Formula, Steps & Examples

Learn how to calculate Cricket Batting Average — the formula explained step by step, with worked examples and a free calculator to check your answer.

By Vikram Iyer, M.Sc Mathematics · Updated Jun 2026 · 2 min read

Calculating your batting average is straightforward once you know the Cricket Batting Average formula and what each input means. This guide explains the method in plain language, walks through a manual calculation, and gives worked examples you can follow — then you can do it instantly with the Cricket Batting Average Calculator.

What is Cricket Batting Average?

The Cricket Batting Average calculation tells you your batting average from a few simple inputs. The figure you are solving for here is the batting average.

The Cricket Batting Average formula

The core formula is:

Batting average = Total runs scored ÷ Times out (dismissals)

Here is what each input means:

  • Total runs scored — a number. Example: 500.
  • Times out (dismissals) — a number. Example: 10.

How to calculate it step by step

  • Write down the total runs scored (for example, 500).
  • Write down the times out (dismissals) (for example, 10).
  • Apply the formula above to get your batting average.
  • Double-check the result with the Cricket Batting Average Calculator.

Worked examples

Example 1

Input / OutputValue
Total runs scored500
Times out (dismissals)10
Batting average50.00

With total runs scored of 500 and times out (dismissals) of 10, the batting average works out to 50.00.

Example 2

With total runs scored of 1,000 and times out (dismissals) of 10, the batting average works out to 100.00.

ResultValue
Batting average100.00

Example 3

With total runs scored of 250 and times out (dismissals) of 10, the batting average works out to 25.00.

ResultValue
Batting average25.00

Tips for an accurate result

  • Keep your units consistent — mixing, say, months with years or grams with kilograms is the most common source of error.
  • Round only at the very end. Rounding inputs early can shift the final answer noticeably.
  • Re-run the numbers whenever an input changes, rather than estimating from an old result.

Prefer not to do the maths by hand? — the Cricket Batting Average Calculator does it instantly, for free, with the formula and a worked example built in.

Continue exploring sports calculators with these tools: Running Cadence Calculator, Swimming Laps Distance Calculator, Bowling Economy Rate Calculator, Cricket Strike Rate Calculator, Baseball Batting Average Calculator.

Calculators in this guide

Frequently asked questions

The formula is: Batting average = Total runs scored ÷ Times out (dismissals). With total runs scored of 500 and times out (dismissals) of 10, the batting average works out to 50.00.

Gather each input, apply the formula step by step keeping your units consistent, and round only at the end. You can verify your answer instantly with the Cricket Batting Average Calculator.

It uses the standard formula with exact arithmetic, so the result is correct for the inputs you enter. Bear in mind that real-world outcomes can still differ when underlying assumptions change.

Vikram Iyer · M.Sc Mathematics

Vikram Iyer is a mathematics educator with over fifteen years of teaching experience, specialising in making quantitative concepts clear and practical for everyday use.