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Overview
Formula

01What this calculator tells you

This calculator turns a win–loss–tie record into a winning percentage — the single number that lets you compare teams or players who have not played the same number of games. Enter your wins and losses (and ties, if your sport has them), and you get the percentage, the three-decimal standings average that leagues actually display (like .600), a plain-language performance band, and an optional full-season projection.

It works for any sport or contest that keeps a win–loss record: basketball, baseball, football, hockey, esports, chess, darts or a fantasy league. If you are tracking other numbers instead, browse the full set on our calculators home page.

Counts each tie as exactly half a win, the standard convention.
Shows the percentage and the .XXX standings average together.
Adds an optional season length to project a final record.

02Percentage vs. the .XXX standings average

The same win rate gets written two ways. A sports broadcast might say a team is winning “sixty percent of its games,” while the standings list it as .600. They are identical — the standings drop the “0.” and keep three decimals. The table shows a few common records in both formats so you can read either at a glance.

Record (W–L)
Standings average
Win percentage
9–1
.900
90.0%
6–4
.600
60.0%
5–5
.500
50.0%
4–6
.400
40.0%
1–9
.100
10.0%
Tip: .500 is the break-even line. Above it you have a winning record; below it, a losing one.

03What counts as a good winning percentage?

It depends on the sport and how long the season is, but the bands below are a useful rule of thumb for full-season records. A single hot week can post a wild percentage; the number gets meaningful once a team has played a decent share of its schedule. The deeper analytics that professional teams use — such as the Pythagorean expected win percentage studied in university sports-analytics journals — start from this same basic win rate.

Winning percentage
Standings average
Read
70%+
.700+
Elite — championship contender
60–69%
.600–.699
Strong winning record
55–59%
.550–.599
Solid, likely a playoff team
50–54%
.500–.549
Around break-even
40–49%
.400–.499
Below .500, a losing record
Under 40%
Under .400
Struggling season

Need a break from stat-crunching? Our BMI calculator and conduit fill calculator cover very different numbers on the same site.

Projecting a full season at the current pace +×

Enter a season length and the calculator multiplies your current win percentage by the total number of games to estimate a final record. A team on a .600 pace across an 82-game season projects to about 49–33. This is a straight-line projection, not a prediction — it assumes the current pace continues.

Analysts refine this idea with models that estimate an expected win percentage from points or goals scored and allowed, which often predicts the end of a season better than the raw record does. The mathematics of that Pythagorean won–loss formula has been worked out for several sports, but the plain pace projection here is a fine first estimate.

Limitations and things to watch +×
  • Small samples swing wildly. A 3–0 start is 1.000, but it tells you very little; treat early-season percentages with caution.
  • Ties are worth half a win. That is the near-universal convention, but a few competitions weight draws differently (for example, three points for a win in soccer league tables).
  • Strength of schedule is ignored. Two teams at .600 can be very different if one played far tougher opponents — the raw percentage cannot see that.
  • The projection is a straight line. It assumes today’s pace holds; injuries, trades and schedule quirks are not modeled. Statistical work on regression toward expected win percentage shows extreme paces usually drift back toward the mean.
Frequently asked questions +×
Q What is a winning percentage?
It is the fraction of games won, expressed out of 100% — wins divided by total games, with each tie counted as half a win. Standings usually show it as a three-decimal average, so .600 means 60% of games won.
Q How do you calculate winning percentage with ties?
Use (wins + 0.5 × ties) ÷ (wins + losses + ties) × 100. A 7–5–2 record is 8 win-equivalents out of 14 games = 57.1%, or a .571 average.
Q What does a .500 record mean?
It means exactly half the games have been won — the break-even point. Above .500 is a winning record; below it is a losing one.
Q How is win percentage used in rankings?
It lets you fairly compare teams that have played different numbers of games, which raw win totals cannot. Leagues sort standings by it and it underpins advanced measures like the Pythagorean expectation.
This calculator is for general sports and games reference. Individual leagues can have their own tie-breaking and percentage rules; check the official standings rules of your competition for cases such as forfeits, abandoned games or points-based tables.

04Related calculators

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01The winning percentage formula

Winning percentage is a weighted proportion: wins count as a full win, ties as half a win, and losses as zero, all divided by the total number of games played.

With ties
Win % = (wins + 0.5 × ties) ÷ (wins + losses + ties) × 100
No ties
Win % = wins ÷ (wins + losses) × 100
Standings average
average = win % ÷ 100 (e.g. 60% → .600)

Where:

  • wins= games won (counted as one win each).
  • losses= games lost (counted as zero).
  • ties= drawn games; each is worth half a win.
  • Win %= the percentage of games won, from 0% to 100%.

02Worked example

Say a basketball team has a 27–17–6 record (27 wins, 17 losses, 6 ties) and you want its winning percentage, and then a projection over a full 82-game season. Work it one line at a time:

Step 1 · Total games
27 + 17 + 6 = 50 games
Step 2 · Win value
27 + (0.5 × 6) = 30 win-equivalents
Step 3 · Divide and scale
30 ÷ 50 = 0.600 → 60.0%
Step 4 · Project the season
0.600 × 82 ≈ 49 wins → 49–33

So a 27–17–6 record is a 60.0% winning percentage (a .600 average), and holding that pace over 82 games projects to roughly a 49–33 finish. This matches the standard result taught in university sports-statistics coursework, where the same rate is the starting point for more advanced expected-wins models.

Win Percentage Calculator

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Enter your record, then press Calculate.
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Elena Castillo ✓ Sports analytics reviewed
Updated Jul 2026 · 5 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team