The Price to Earnings Ratio Calculator works out your p/e ratio, along with 1 related figure in an instant. Enter share price and earnings per share (eps) and the result updates as you type — it is free, needs no sign-up, and runs entirely in your browser so your figures stay private.
Enter the share price.
Enter the earnings per share (eps).
Read off your p/e ratio, together with earnings yield — the calculator updates automatically, with no button to press.
Formula
The Price to Earnings Ratio Calculator uses the formula:
P/E ratio = Share price ÷ Earnings per share (EPS)
Worked example
For example, with share price of ₹100 and earnings per share (eps) of ₹5, the p/e ratio is 20.00.
Inputs used
Share price
₹100
Earnings per share (EPS)
₹5
Results
P/E ratio
20.00
Earnings yield
5.00%
Results are estimates for educational use, not professional advice.
Net income divided by shares outstanding (EPS) — the profit attributable to each share.
Ratio
A comparison of two quantities showing how many times one contains the other.
Frequently asked questions
The price-to-earnings ratio is the share price divided by earnings per share. A 100 share with EPS of 5 has a P/E of 20.
It shows how much investors pay for each rupee of earnings. A higher P/E can mean high growth expectations or an expensive stock.
Earnings yield is the inverse of P/E, EPS ÷ price as a percentage. A P/E of 20 is a 5% earnings yield.
Not necessarily. A low P/E can signal value or hidden problems. Compare with industry peers and consider growth and debt.
The Price to Earnings Ratio Calculator uses the formula: P/E ratio = Share price ÷ Earnings per share (EPS). For example, with share price of ₹100 and earnings per share (eps) of ₹5, the p/e ratio is 20.00.
Enter the share price. Enter the earnings per share (eps). Read off your p/e ratio, together with earnings yield — the calculator updates automatically, with no button to press.
Understand the numbers behind shares — what the P/E ratio means, how dividends and yield work, the power of reinvesting, how to think about risk, and the habits that separate investing from gambling.
Reference table of P/E ratio for Price to Earnings Ratio across a range of share price values — exact, engine-computed figures you can read off at a glance.