Growth Rate Average Calculator

Measure change between periods with flexible options. Evaluate mean growth, CAGR, volatility, and indexed trends. Turn raw time series into clearer performance insights today.

Use this data science tool to evaluate period-by-period growth, compounding behavior, forecast scenarios, and volatility from any ordered numeric series.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Separate observations with commas, semicolons, or new lines. Do not place a zero before any interval that needs percentage growth.

Plotly Graph

Example Data Table

This sample uses monthly active users to demonstrate sequential growth analysis in a data science workflow.

From To Previous Value Current Value Absolute Change Growth Rate Index Base 100
Jan Feb 1,200.00 1,290.00 90.00 7.50% 107.50
Feb Mar 1,290.00 1,385.00 95.00 7.36% 115.42
Mar Apr 1,385.00 1,502.00 117.00 8.45% 125.17
Apr May 1,502.00 1,638.00 136.00 9.05% 136.50
May Jun 1,638.00 1,765.00 127.00 7.75% 147.08

Formula Used

Period Growth Rate

Growth Rate = ((Current Value - Previous Value) / Previous Value) × 100

Arithmetic Average Growth

Arithmetic Mean = Sum of all period growth rates / Number of intervals

Geometric Average Growth

Geometric Mean = (Product of growth factors)^(1 / Number of intervals) - 1

Annualized CAGR

CAGR = (Ending Value / Starting Value)^(Periods Per Year / Intervals) - 1

Weighted Recent Mean

Weighted Mean = Sum(Growth Rate × Recency Weight) / Sum(Recency Weights)

Trimmed Mean Growth

Trimmed Mean removes the highest and lowest selected percentages before averaging the remaining growth rates.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter a metric name, such as revenue, conversions, or active users.
  2. Choose a period label like day, week, month, or quarter.
  3. Set periods per year for correct annualized CAGR output.
  4. Paste ordered labels and numeric values into their fields.
  5. Pick a forecast method and optional forecast horizon.
  6. Submit the form to view summary metrics, interval details, exports, and the interactive graph.

FAQs

1. What does average growth rate mean?

It is the typical period-over-period percentage change across an ordered series. This page reports arithmetic, geometric, weighted, trimmed, and annualized versions for stronger trend analysis.

2. What is the difference between arithmetic and geometric averages?

Arithmetic averaging treats each period’s percentage change equally. Geometric averaging respects compounding and usually describes multi-period growth better when values evolve multiplicatively.

3. Why can CAGR differ from the average period growth?

CAGR annualizes the full start-to-end change using your selected periods per year. It smooths the path into one yearly rate, so it often differs from simple period averages.

4. Can I use negative values?

Arithmetic metrics can still work when previous values are not zero. Geometric mean and CAGR may return N/A when compounding assumptions break, especially with non-positive cumulative factors.

5. Why is a previous zero value not allowed?

Percentage growth divides change by the previous observation. When that prior value equals zero, the percentage rate becomes undefined, so the calculator blocks the interval.

6. What does trimmed mean do?

Trimmed mean removes a chosen share of the highest and lowest growth rates before averaging. It reduces outlier influence and can better represent central tendency in noisy series.

7. How are forecast values produced?

Forecasts extend the last actual value by repeatedly applying the selected average periodic rate. They are scenario estimates, not guaranteed outcomes, so validate them with domain knowledge.

8. Which average should data scientists choose?

Use arithmetic mean for simple summaries, geometric mean for compounding behavior, weighted mean for recent momentum, and trimmed mean when outliers distort the trend.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.