Free cricket tool

Bowling Average Calculator

Calculate a bowler’s cricket bowling average from runs conceded and wickets taken. Built for players, scorers, coaches, academies, clubs and tournament organisers.

Runs conceded ÷ wickets Lower is better Mobile friendly
Bowling average
20.00

240 runs conceded and 12 wickets gives a bowling average of 20.00.

Runs240
Wickets12

Calculate bowling average

Enter total runs conceded and wickets taken. Cricstars calculates the bowling average instantly.

Bowling average formula

Bowling Average = Runs Conceded ÷ Wickets Taken.

Example: 240 runs conceded and 12 wickets = 240 ÷ 12 = 20.00.

What bowling average tells you

Bowling average shows how many runs a bowler concedes for every wicket taken. A lower bowling average is usually better because it means the bowler is taking wickets without giving away too many runs.

Bowling average vs economy rate

Bowling average measures wicket-taking cost. Economy rate measures runs conceded per over. A complete bowling review should use both numbers together.

Bowling average FAQs

Simple answers for players, scorers, coaches, parents and club admins.

How do I calculate bowling average?

Divide runs conceded by wickets taken. Example: 240 runs and 12 wickets = 20.00.

Is a lower bowling average better?

Yes. A lower bowling average usually means the bowler takes wickets while conceding fewer runs.

What if wickets are zero?

The bowling average is not available yet because the formula cannot divide by zero wickets.

Is bowling average the same as economy rate?

No. Bowling average is runs per wicket. Economy rate is runs per over.

Can this be used for club cricket?

Yes. The same formula works for school, academy, club, T20, ODI-style matches and Test cricket.