NFL Passer Rating Calculator
Calculate a quarterback’s official NFL passer rating using the exact league formula. Enter the stats below to see how different performances impact the rating.
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How Is NFL Passer Rating Calculated? The Complete Guide
The NFL passer rating (officially called the “passer rating” or “quarterback rating”) is the league’s standard metric for evaluating quarterback performance. Unlike simpler statistics like completion percentage or yards per attempt, the passer rating combines four key metrics into a single number that ranges from 0 to 158.3 (with 158.3 being a “perfect” score).
The NFL Passer Rating Formula
The formula was developed in 1973 by the NFL’s statistical committee and has remained unchanged since. It consists of four components, each weighted equally (25%):
- Completion Percentage (CMP%): [(Completions/Attempts) – 0.3] × 5
- Yards per Attempt (YPA): [(Yards/Attempts) – 3] × 0.25
- Touchdown Percentage (TD%): (Touchdowns/Attempts) × 20
- Interception Percentage (INT%): 2.375 – (Interceptions/Attempts × 25)
Each component is calculated separately, then divided by 6 and multiplied by 100 to get a value between 0 and 2.375. These four values are summed to produce the final rating, which is then scaled to fit between 0 and 158.3.
| Component | Minimum Value | Maximum Value | Perfect Game Requirements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completion % | 0.0 | 2.375 | 77.5% completion rate |
| Yards per Attempt | 0.0 | 2.375 | 12.5+ yards per attempt |
| TD % | 0.0 | 2.375 | 11.875% TD rate |
| INT % | 0.0 | 2.375 | 0.0% INT rate |
Why These Specific Weights and Thresholds?
The NFL designed the formula to create a standardized metric where:
- A rating of 66.7 represents “average” performance (based on 1970s league averages)
- A rating of 100.0 represents “excellent” performance
- A rating of 158.3 represents a “perfect” game (achieved only 70+ times in NFL history)
The thresholds were set so that:
- Completion percentage rewards accuracy above 30% (the 0.3 baseline)
- Yards per attempt rewards efficiency above 3.0 yards (the baseline)
- Touchdown percentage rewards scoring at a rate of 5%+ (20× multiplier)
- Interception percentage penalizes turnovers at a rate of 2.375% (the inverse of the TD multiplier)
Historical Context and Evolution
When introduced in 1973, the passer rating was revolutionary because it:
- Combined multiple stats into one metric
- Accounted for both positive (TDs, yards) and negative (INTs) plays
- Normalized performance across eras (the 158.3 scale remains constant)
However, the formula has faced criticism over time:
| Criticism | Example | Modern Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Doesn’t account for sacks or rushing | Lamar Jackson’s 2019 MVP season (rating: 113.3) was more valuable than his rating suggested due to rushing | Total QBR (ESPN), EPA (Expected Points Added) |
| Yards and completions are overvalued | A QB with 300 yards and 0 TDs can have a higher rating than one with 200 yards and 3 TDs | ANY/A (Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt) |
| Baselines are outdated (1970s averages) | League average rating has risen from ~60 in 1970s to ~90 today | Adjusted ratings (e.g., Pro Football Reference’s “Adj Passer Rating”) |
Perfect Passer Rating Games in NFL History
As of 2023, only 73 perfect passer rating games (158.3) have been recorded in NFL history (regular season only). Notable examples:
- Peyton Manning holds the record with 4 perfect games (2003, 2004, 2012, 2013)
- Ben Roethlisberger (2007 vs. Ravens) – First perfect game with 0 incompletions (11/11, 213 yards, 2 TDs)
- Kurt Warner (1999 vs. Jaguars) – Highest yardage in a perfect game (414 yards)
- Nick Foles (2013 vs. Raiders) – Tied record with 7 TDs in a perfect game
The most recent perfect game was by Jared Goff (2023, Lions vs. Broncos), going 17/20 for 233 yards and 2 TDs.
How Passer Rating Compares to Other QB Metrics
While passer rating remains the NFL’s official metric, modern analytics prefer alternatives:
| Metric | Formula | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passer Rating | [ (CMP% × 5) + (YPA × 0.25) + (TD% × 20) + (2.375 – INT% × 25) ] / 6 × 100 | Standardized (0-158.3 scale), officially recognized | Outdated baselines, ignores sacks/rushing |
| ANY/A | (Passing Yards + 20×TDs – 45×INTs – Sack Yards) / (Attempts + Sacks) | Accounts for sacks, better predicts wins | Less intuitive scale, not official |
| QBR (ESPN) | Proprietary (accounts for game context, rushing, penalties) | Most comprehensive, context-aware | Opaque calculation, not public |
| EPA/Play | Expected Points Added per play (based on down/distance) | Best predictor of future success | Requires play-by-play data |
Practical Applications of Passer Rating
Despite its flaws, passer rating is widely used for:
- Contract Negotiations: Teams often tie bonuses to passer rating thresholds (e.g., “$500K bonus for 100+ rating”).
- Draft Evaluation: College QBs with high ratings (e.g., Joe Burrow’s 2019 CFB rating: 202.0) are prioritized.
- Hall of Fame Voting: Only 3 QBs with career ratings < 75.0 are in the HOF (pre-1970s era).
- Fantasy Football: Many platforms use passer rating to calculate QB points.
For example, the 2023 NFL MVP race heavily featured passer rating:
- Jalen Hurts (Eagles): 101.5 rating (2nd in MVP voting)
- Patrick Mahomes (Chiefs): 98.3 rating (MVP winner)
- Josh Allen (Bills): 92.2 rating (3rd in MVP voting)
How to Improve Your Passer Rating (For QBs and Coaches)
Strategies to maximize passer rating:
- Prioritize Completion Percentage:
- Throw high-percentage passes (slants, screens)
- Avoid “hero ball” – check downs count the same as deep completions in the formula
- Maximize Yards per Attempt:
- Use play-action (adds ~1.5 YPA on average)
- Attack deep zones (even 1-2 deep completions boost YPA significantly)
- Protect the Football:
- Interceptions hurt 5× more than touchdowns help (25× vs. 20× multiplier)
- Throw away instead of forcing into coverage
- Game Script Matters:
- Ratings are higher in positive game scripts (leading allows for safer throws)
- Come-from-behind QBs often have lower ratings despite “clutch” performances
Common Misconceptions About Passer Rating
Myths debunked:
- “A 100+ rating means you’re elite.” Reality: League average has risen to ~90. In 2023, 18 QBs had 100+ ratings.
- “Perfect games are rare because they’re hard.” Reality: Most perfect games come in blowouts (e.g., 70% of perfect games occur with a 21+ point lead).
- “Rating correlates with wins.” Reality: Since 2010, QBs with top-5 ratings win MVP 60% of the time, but only 40% win the Super Bowl that year.
- “Rushing QBs have lower ratings.” Reality: Lamar Jackson (career 96.7 rating) and Josh Allen (95.2) prove otherwise.