📐 Math

📊 Average Calculator

Calculate the mean, median, mode, range, and sum of any set of numbers. Perfect for students, teachers, and anyone working with data. Fast and clear!

✏️ Enter Your Values
💡 You can enter as many numbers as you like, separated by commas!
✨ Your Result
Result
🦉Owl's Explanation
📊
Fill in the values on the left
and click Calculate! ✨

🤔 How Does This Tool Work?

Our Average Calculator computes five key statistical measures for any set of numbers:

  • Mean = Sum of all values ÷ Count of values
  • Median = Middle value when sorted (or average of two middle values for even count)
  • Mode = The value that appears most frequently
  • Range = Maximum value − Minimum value
  • Sum = Total of all values added together

Just type your numbers separated by commas, click Calculate, and all five measures appear instantly with a clear explanation of what each one tells you.

❓ FAQ
What is the difference between mean, median, and mode?
Mean is the arithmetic average (sum ÷ count). Median is the middle value when sorted. Mode is the most frequently occurring value. Each gives different information about your data set.
When should I use median instead of mean?
Use median when your data has extreme values (outliers) that would skew the mean. For example, if 9 people earn 30,000 rupees and 1 person earns 1,000,000 rupees, the mean salary looks much higher than what most people actually earn — the median is more representative.
What is the range in statistics?
Range = Maximum value − Minimum value. It shows how spread out your data is. A large range means values vary widely. A small range means values are clustered closely together.
Can I calculate the average of decimal numbers?
Yes! You can enter any numbers including decimals. Just separate them with commas: e.g. 3.5, 7.2, 4.8, 9.1
What if all numbers are the same — what is the mode?
If all numbers appear the same number of times, every number is technically a mode. Our calculator identifies the most frequent value. If all values occur equally, it shows all of them as the mode.