The ERA formula
Earned Run Average estimates how many earned runs a pitcher allows per nine innings:
Example: 12 earned runs in 35.0 innings gives 12 ร 9 รท 35 = 3.09.
Innings notation counts outs
Baseball does not use ordinary decimal tenths for partial innings. The suffix .1 means one out and .2 means two outs. Five innings and one out is therefore 5.1, or 16 outs. The third out completes the next whole inning, so 5.3 is invalid and should be 6.0.
Earned runs require official scoring
ERA uses earned runs, not every run that scores. Official scoring determines whether a run is earned and can charge a pitcher for a responsible baserunner who scores after that pitcher leaves.
There is no universal performance band
Lower ERA means fewer earned runs per nine innings, but league scoring, ballpark, defence, era, role and sample size affect interpretation. A fixed โgoodโ or โbadโ cutoff is not reliable across all contexts.
Use supporting statistics
ERA does not isolate pitching from every fielding or sequencing effect. WHIP, strikeout and walk rates, ERA+ and other measures can add context.