Sharpe Ratio

Return Metrics
Updated Apr 2026 Has calculator

Measures excess return per unit of total volatility — the most widely used risk-adjusted performance metric.

What is Sharpe Ratio?

The Sharpe ratio evaluates how much excess return (above the risk-free rate) an investor receives per unit of total risk (standard deviation). A higher Sharpe ratio means better risk-adjusted performance: the portfolio earns more return per unit of volatility assumed. A Sharpe ratio below 1 is often considered suboptimal for an actively managed fund; above 1 is good; above 2 is excellent and uncommon. Because it uses total standard deviation in the denominator, the Sharpe ratio penalises both upside and downside volatility equally. For portfolios where only downside risk matters, the Sortino ratio is a better alternative. All rate inputs must use consistent units — both in percent or both as decimals.

Formula

Sharpe = (Rp − Rf) / σp

Worked Example

Worked example — Vanguard 500 Index Fund (VFIAX)

10-Year Period Ending Dec 2023

Step 1  Annualised return: 12.03%
Step 2  Risk-free rate (avg 10-yr Treasury): 2.30%
Step 3  Annualised standard deviation: 15.40%
Step 4  Sharpe = (12.03% − 2.30%) / 15.40% = 9.73% / 15.40%
Step 5  Sharpe = 0.63 — good long-term risk-adjusted performance for a passive fund

Source: Vanguard — VFIAX Performance Data (2024-01-31)

Calculate Sharpe Ratio

Annualised portfolio return for the period

10-year US Treasury yield or money market rate

Annualised standard deviation of portfolio returns

Sharpe Ratio

Not investment advice.

How to Interpret Sharpe Ratio

< 0
Negative — return below risk-free rate; poor risk-adjusted
0 – 1
0–1: Below average — inadequate compensation for risk
1 – 2
1–2: Good — solid risk-adjusted return
> 2
Above 2: Excellent — exceptional risk-adjusted performance

📚 Portfolio Performance — Complete the path

  1. Sharpe Ratio
  2. Sortino Ratio
  3. Treynor Ratio
  4. Jensen's Alpha
  5. Information Ratio