What is PIV in Baseball?
Player Impact Value · Advanced
PIV (Player Impact Value) is Baseball Data Hub's proprietary statistic that measures a player's overall offensive impact relative to their own era's league average, with an adjustment for how often they take the field. Unlike WAR (Wins Above Replacement), which compares players to a theoretical replacement-level player, PIV asks how much offensive value a player creates compared to the average player of their era — and rewards those who stay healthy and contribute consistently throughout a season.
Formula
PIV = (wOBA − lgWOBA) × PA × 50 × [1 + (G ÷ TeamG × 0.3)]
Example — Babe Ruth, 1921: Ruth's wOBA was 0.489; the 1921 league wOBA was 0.336. Difference = 0.153. Ruth had 692 PA. OI = 0.153 × 692 × 50 = 5,297. He played 152 of 154 games. Availability Bonus = 1 + (152 ÷ 154 × 0.3) ≈ 1.296. PIV = 5,297 × 1.296 ≈ 6,865 (season component; career PIV accumulates across all seasons).
Benchmarks
| Level | PIV |
|---|---|
| Historic / All-Time (single season) | 9,000+ |
| Elite / MVP-Caliber (single season) | 7,000–8,999 |
| Excellent / All-Star (single season) | 5,000–6,999 |
| Above Average (single season) | 3,000–4,999 |
| Average (single season) | 0–2,999 |
| Below Average (single season) | Negative |
ALL-TIME CAREER PIV LEADERS
| Rank | Player | PIV |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Babe Ruth | 111,979 |
| 2 | Ted Williams | 96,302 |
| 3 | Barry Bonds | 96,025 |
| 4 | Ty Cobb | 87,474 |
| 5 | Stan Musial | 83,624 |
| 6 | Lou Gehrig | 81,072 |
| 7 | Hank Aaron | 78,624 |
| 8 | Willie Mays | 74,032 |
| 9 | Tris Speaker | 73,229 |
| 10 | Jimmie Foxx | 72,809 |
BEST SINGLE-SEASON PIV IN MLB HISTORY
| Rank | Player | Year | Team | PIV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Babe Ruth | 1921 | NYA | 10,137 |
| 2 | Babe Ruth | 1920 | NYA | 9,810 |
| 3 | Babe Ruth | 1923 | NYA | 9,715 |
| 4 | Barry Bonds | 2001 | SFN | 9,433 |
| 5 | Barry Bonds | 2004 | SFN | 9,294 |
| 6 | Barry Bonds | 2002 | SFN | 8,992 |
| 7 | Ted Williams | 1941 | BOS | 8,672 |
| 8 | Babe Ruth | 1924 | NYA | 8,611 |
| 9 | Jimmie Foxx | 1932 | PHA | 8,550 |
| 10 | Babe Ruth | 1927 | NYA | 8,548 |
HISTORICAL CONTEXT
PIV (Player Impact Value) was developed by Baseball Data Hub to address a key gap in traditional baseball statistics: the difficulty of fairly comparing offensive production across wildly different eras of the game. Batting average, home runs, and RBI are influenced heavily by the offensive environment of each era — a .320 hitter in the 1960s Pitcher's Era was far more valuable than a .320 hitter during the high-offense Steroid Era of the late 1990s.
The foundation of PIV is wOBA (weighted On-Base Average), a metric that assigns historically calibrated run values to each offensive event — singles, doubles, triples, home runs, walks, and hit-by-pitches. PIV calculates the league-wide wOBA for each specific season and measures every player against that year's baseline, not a universal average. This means Babe Ruth in 1921 and Barry Bonds in 2001 are both measured against the offensive environment they actually competed in.
PIV adds an Availability Bonus multiplier to credit players who stay healthy and play the full season. A player who appears in all 162 games receives a 1.30× multiplier on their Offensive Impact, while a player who misses significant time gets less credit regardless of their per-game production. This component reflects the philosophy that the best ability in baseball is availability.
Career PIV accumulates season-by-season, making it a comprehensive measure of sustained offensive excellence over a full career. The metric is calculated for hitters from 1901 through the present day, with era adjustments built into every comparison. Pitcher PIV is a parallel metric that applies the same era-adjusted framework to pitching performance using FIP (Fielding Independent Pitching) as its base.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
What is PIV in baseball?
PIV (Player Impact Value) is Baseball Data Hub's proprietary statistic that measures a player's overall offensive impact relative to their own era's league average, with an adjustment for how often they take the field. Unlike WAR (Wins Above Replacement), which compares players to a theoretical replacement-level player, PIV asks how much offensive value a player creates compared to the average player of their era — and rewards those who stay healthy and contribute consistently throughout a season.
How is PIV calculated?
PIV combines two components: Offensive Impact (OI) and the Availability Bonus (AB). Offensive Impact = (player wOBA − league wOBA for that season) × Plate Appearances × 50. The scaling factor of 50 converts the raw wOBA difference into a readable number. The Availability Bonus multiplies OI by a factor ranging from 1.0 (zero games played) to 1.3 (all 162 games played), rewarding durable players who contribute across the full season. Both components are compared against the league average of the specific season, making era-to-era comparisons fair.
What is a good PIV in baseball?
PIV is scaled so that a league-average player produces 0 in a given season. Positive values indicate above-average offensive production; negative values indicate below-average production. Single-season PIV above 9,000 represents a historically dominant offensive season. Career PIV above 90,000 marks inner-circle Hall of Fame offensive production.
How does PIV differ from WAR?
WAR (Wins Above Replacement) compares players to a theoretical replacement-level player — the type of player a team could freely acquire from the minor leagues or waiver wire. PIV instead compares players to the actual league average of their specific season. PIV is also purely offensive, making no attempt to model defensive or baserunning value. This makes PIV a cleaner measure of offensive dominance across eras, while WAR is a broader measure of total player value.
Why does PIV use wOBA instead of OPS or batting average?
OPS and batting average treat all offensive events with imprecise weights. OPS, for example, adds on-base percentage and slugging percentage, but slugging percentage already includes singles, doubling-counts them in the sum. wOBA assigns run values derived from actual historical run production data — a home run is worth approximately 2.08 times what a walk is worth, a double roughly 1.24 times. This makes wOBA a more accurate measure of offensive value per plate appearance, and gives PIV a more reliable foundation.
What is the Availability Bonus in PIV?
The Availability Bonus (AB) multiplies a player's Offensive Impact by a factor between 1.0 and 1.3 based on how many games they played relative to the team's full schedule. A player in all 162 games gets the maximum 1.30× multiplier; a player in only half the games gets roughly 1.15×. The formula is: AB = 1 + (Games Played ÷ Team Games × 0.3). Team games are era-adjusted (154 games before 1961, 162 after). This component rewards durability alongside offensive excellence.
Where can I see the all-time PIV leaders?
The full PIV leaderboard — including career totals and single-season rankings — is available at the PIV Leaders page. The complete methodology explaining every component of the formula is also available for deeper reading.
EXPLORE MORE STATS
Pitching
ERA
Learn more →
Batting
OPS
Learn more →
Batting
AVG
Learn more →
Batting
HR
Learn more →
Batting
RBI
Learn more →
Advanced
WAR
Learn more →
Pitching
WHIP
Learn more →
Batting
SLG
Learn more →
Batting
OBP
Learn more →
Pitching
Wins
Learn more →
Pitching
SO
Learn more →
Batting
SB
Learn more →
Pitching
SV
Learn more →
Batting
BB
Learn more →
Advanced
FIP
Learn more →
Pitching
K/9
Learn more →
Pitching
BB/9
Learn more →
Advanced
BABIP
Learn more →
Advanced
wOBA
Learn more →