Exit Velocity by Age Chart — Find Your Percentile (Interactive)

Enter your age and measured exit velocity (or pitching velocity) and find out where you rank for your age group — from youth ball all the way to the pros. Benchmarks are based on HitTrax aggregate data, Driveline Baseball development standards, and Perfect Game showcase averages.

exit velocity by age chart — interactive baseball velocity benchmarks by age and level

Exit Velocity and Pitching Velocity Calculator

Enter your age and measured velocity. The calculator shows your tier (Below Average through Top Level), the full benchmark range for your age, and what your number means for development and recruitment. Benchmarks reflect competitive travel ball and showcase standards — recreational leagues average lower.
Please enter both your age/level and a velocity between 20 and 130 mph.
Please enter both your age/level and a velocity between 20 and 110 mph.
Your Exit Velocity Result
Your Velocity
Your Tier
Avg Range for Age
Your Pitching Velocity Result
Your Velocity
Your Tier
Avg Range for Age

Exit Velocity Benchmarks by Age

These ranges cover the realistic spectrum for competitive players at each age. “Elite” = top 10–15% nationally. “Top Level” = college/pro projection territory. Recreational leagues average 5–10 mph lower than what’s shown here.

Age / Level Below Avg Average Above Avg Elite Top Level
8Under 4040–5050–6060–6565+ mph
9Under 4545–5555–6565–7070+ mph
10Under 5050–6060–7070–7575+ mph
11Under 5555–6565–7575–8080+ mph
12Under 6060–7070–8080–8585+ mph
13Under 6565–7575–8585–9090+ mph
14Under 7070–8080–9090–9595+ mph
15Under 7575–8585–9292–9898+ mph
16Under 7878–8888–9595–100100+ mph
17Under 8080–9090–9797–103103+ mph
18Under 8282–9292–100100–105105+ mph
CollegeUnder 8585–9494–102102–108108+ mph
ProfessionalUnder 8787–9595–105105–110110+ mph

Source: HitTrax aggregate event data, Driveline Baseball development benchmarks, Perfect Game national showcase averages. Benchmarks reflect competitive travel and school ball — recreational leagues average 5–10 mph lower.


Pitching Velocity Benchmarks by Age

Pitching velocity is measured at release with a radar gun or Trackman. These reflect competitive travel and high school averages. Front-door velocity (measured by a gun pointed at the pitcher, not the plate) reads 5–7 mph higher than plate velocity — showcase events use plate velocity.

Age / Level Below Avg Average Above Avg Elite Top Level
8Under 4040–5050–5858–6363+ mph
9Under 4545–5555–6363–6868+ mph
10Under 4848–5656–6464–6969+ mph
11Under 5252–6060–6868–7373+ mph
12Under 5555–6464–7272–7777+ mph
13Under 6060–7070–7878–8383+ mph
14Under 6565–7575–8383–8888+ mph
15Under 6868–7878–8686–9191+ mph
16Under 7272–8282–9090–9595+ mph
17Under 7575–8585–9393–9898+ mph
18Under 7878–8888–9696–101101+ mph
CollegeUnder 8282–9191–9797–103103+ mph
ProfessionalUnder 8888–9595–100100–106106+ mph

Source: NFHS velocity data, Driveline Baseball, Perfect Game showcase averages, MLB Statcast. Front-door (muzzle) velocity reads 5–7 mph higher than plate velocity — showcase events use plate velocity.


What Exit Velocity Actually Measures

Exit velocity tells you one thing: how hard you’re hitting the ball. It’s the most objective measure of raw contact power — measurable, repeatable, and independent of weather, field conditions, or umpire calls.

Why coaches and scouts track it

At the MLB level, the hard-hit threshold is 95+ mph — Statcast classifies any ball 95 mph or harder as a “hard-hit ball,” and hard-hit rate is one of the strongest predictors of offensive production. At the youth and high school level, scouts use exit velocity as a raw-tool filter. A 16-year-old hitting 95+ mph will get attention regardless of stats, because the physical tool is there.

Exit velocity can be trained. It’s a skill, not just body type. Players who commit to rotational power development and bat speed training can add 5–10 mph over a 6–12 month training cycle.

What exit velocity doesn’t measure

Exit velocity doesn’t tell you about bat-to-ball skill (contact rate), launch angle (line drive vs. pop-up vs. grounder), or pull tendency. A player hitting 95 mph who pops everything up is less valuable than an 85 mph hitter who squares 70% of balls up. Exit velocity is one data point — it answers “how hard?” not “how well.”

Use exit velocity alongside batting statistics and launch angle data to get a complete picture of a hitter’s profile.


Exit Velocity and College Recruiting

College coaches use exit velocity as a first-pass screening filter at showcases. Here’s where each level typically lands for an 18-year-old (adjust down 3–5 mph per year for younger players):

Level Typical Exit Velocity Range Notes
JUCO / D380–90 mphSkill and contact rate matter more at this level
D285–93 mphVelocity + batting average combination
Mid-Major D188–96 mphStrong raw tools expected; mechanics evaluated
Power 5 D192–102 mphMinimum threshold for everyday player consideration
MLB Draft Prospect100+ mphElite or Top Level tier required at any age

These are thresholds for everyday players, not averages. A 17-year-old hitting 95+ mph will get looked at by D1 programs regardless of where they play. A strong exit velocity at 14–15 years old is an early flag that generates long-term recruiting interest from programs that track prospects over time.

Exit velocity and bat selection

The right bat construction makes a measurable difference in exit velocity. Power hitters (already hitting the ball hard) can squeeze extra exit velocity out of an end-loaded hybrid bat due to higher swing weight on solid contact. Developing hitters are better served by a balanced two-piece composite bat — larger sweet spot, more consistent solid contact, and higher contact-adjusted exit velocity. Find the right bat for your swing type →


Frequently Asked Questions

For a 12-year-old in competitive travel ball, 70–80 mph is above average. 80+ mph is elite for that age group. Average for a 12-year-old is 60–70 mph. At 85+ mph, a 12-year-old is in the top 1–2% nationally and will be noticed at larger showcases and tournaments.
At 14, 80–90 mph is above average. 90+ mph is elite — putting the player in high school varsity territory two years early. College coaches use 90+ mph at age 14 as a flag for future D1 potential. A 14-year-old consistently hitting 95+ mph has Power 5 tools.
The MLB average exit velocity is approximately 87–90 mph. Statcast classifies 95+ mph as a “hard-hit ball.” Elite hitters (Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Judge) regularly hit 110–115 mph. The all-time Statcast record is 122.4 mph (Giancarlo Stanton, 2018 regular season). The 95+ mph hard-hit threshold is the pro standard for measuring contact quality.
For high school varsity, 80–88 mph is average. 88–95 mph is above average and gets attention from college programs. 95+ mph as a high schooler puts the player firmly on D1 recruiting radars. Power 5 programs typically look for 90+ mph at minimum for position players.
Exit velocity is measured with a HitTrax system, Trackman unit, Rapsodo, or a radar gun positioned behind the batter. Showcase events almost always use HitTrax or Trackman — radar guns placed behind the batter are less accurate for exit velocity and produce inconsistent readings. For training, HitTrax and Rapsodo provide the most consistent data at the youth and high school level.
Yes, but often in the opposite direction from what players expect. A heavier bat has more potential energy on solid contact, but only if the player maintains full bat speed. Most youth and high school players generate higher exit velocity with a lighter, balanced bat because they make more consistent solid contact at full swing speed. At the college and pro level, where mechanics are refined, heavier bats can add exit velocity on contact.
Bat speed is how fast the barrel moves through the hitting zone (measured in mph at the sweet spot). Exit velocity is how fast the ball leaves the bat after contact. Bat speed is the input; exit velocity is the output. High bat speed with poor contact location produces low exit velocity. Good bat speed with consistent barrel contact produces consistently high exit velocity.
At 17–18 years old: 85+ mph gets attention from JUCO and D3 programs. 88+ mph puts a pitcher on mid-major D1 radar. 92+ mph is the Power 5 threshold for serious consideration. At 90+ mph, a 16-year-old will have early D1 interest. Velocity alone isn’t sufficient — movement, command, and secondary pitches matter significantly at the D1 level — but velocity is the first filter scouts apply.
Scroll to Top