Standard Deviation of Returns

Risk & Portfolio
Updated Apr 2026 Has calculator

Measures the dispersion of returns around the average — the most common gauge of investment volatility.

What is Standard Deviation?

Standard deviation quantifies how widely an investment's periodic returns are spread around their mean. A higher standard deviation signals greater volatility and, by extension, higher risk: in any given period the actual return may deviate substantially from what an investor expects. A lower standard deviation suggests steadier, more predictable returns. In portfolio management, standard deviation is the foundational risk input to Sharpe and Sortino ratios, Modern Portfolio Theory, and mean-variance optimization. The calculator uses the sample formula (N−1 denominator), which is standard practice when working with historical return data rather than the full population of possible returns.

Formula

σ = √[ Σ(Rᵢ − R̄)² / (N − 1) ]

Worked Example

Worked example — S&P 500 Index (SPX)

Annual returns 2014–2023

Step 1  Annual returns (%): 13.7, 1.4, 12.0, 21.8, −4.4, 31.5, 18.4, −18.1, 26.3, 24.2
Step 2  Mean return: 12.68%
Step 3  Sum of squared deviations: 1,881.6
Step 4  σ = √(1,881.6 / 9) = √209.07 = 14.46%
Step 5  → S&P 500 annual returns deviated ~14.5% from their mean over this period

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices — S&P 500 Annual Returns (2024-01-31)

Calculate Standard Deviation

Enter comma-separated returns, e.g.: 12, -4, 8, 15, -2, 6

Standard Deviation

Not investment advice.

How to Interpret Standard Deviation

< 5
Very Low Volatility — bond-like stability
5 – 12
Low-Moderate Volatility — diversified portfolio
12 – 20
Moderate Volatility — typical equity range
> 20
High Volatility — elevated risk, sector or small-cap

📚 Risk Metrics — Complete the path

  1. Standard Deviation
  2. Variance
  3. Beta
  4. R-Squared
  5. Correlation