Enter Pokémon Stat Details
Formula Used
This calculator checks every possible IV from 0 to 31. It compares the generated stat with your entered observed stat. Matching values are returned as the possible IV range.
HP Formula
HP = floor(((2 × Base + IV + floor(EV / 4)) × Level) / 100) + Level + 10
Other Stat Formula
Stat = floor((floor(((2 × Base + IV + floor(EV / 4)) × Level) / 100) + 5) × Nature)
A beneficial nature uses 1.1. A hindering nature uses 0.9. A neutral nature uses 1.0.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the Pokémon name for your report.
- Add the exact level shown in your game.
- Select the correct nature.
- Enter each base stat from a trusted Pokédex.
- Enter known EVs for each stat.
- Enter the current observed stats from the summary screen.
- Press the calculate button.
- Review the IV ranges, chart, rating, and export options.
Example Data Table
| Pokémon | Level | Nature | Base Speed | Speed EV | Observed Speed | Likely Speed IV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pikachu | 50 | Timid | 90 | 252 | 156 | 31 |
| Decidueye | 50 | Adamant | 70 | 252 | 122 | 30 - 31 |
| Incineroar | 50 | Careful | 60 | 0 | 80 | 20 - 23 |
| Primarina | 50 | Modest | 60 | 4 | 81 | 28 - 31 |
About the IV Calculator Sun Moon
Purpose
This tool helps players estimate individual values in Pokémon Sun and Moon. IVs are hidden numbers. They shape final stats with base stats, effort values, level, and nature. A higher IV usually means a stronger stat. The calculator is useful when you want to check breeding results, battle-ready Pokémon, or trained team members.
Why Ranges Appear
At lower levels, several IVs can create the same visible stat. This happens because the game rounds numbers down. A level 50 Pokémon often has a narrow range. A very low level Pokémon may show a wider range. Exact EV data gives a better answer. Wrong EVs can produce no legal match.
Nature Support
Nature is important. It raises one non-HP stat by ten percent and lowers another by ten percent. Neutral natures do not change stats. This page applies nature multipliers while testing every possible IV. That makes the result more reliable than a simple estimate.
Advanced Review
The result table shows each stat separately. You can see base stat, EV, observed stat, nature effect, possible IV range, match count, and quality label. The chart compares average IV strength across all six stats. This helps you spot weak areas quickly.
Exports and Planning
The CSV button saves a spreadsheet-friendly report. The PDF button creates a simple printable summary. These exports are helpful for team planning, breeding notes, and progress tracking. You can compare several Pokémon before choosing the best one.
Best Accuracy Tips
Use exact level, exact nature, and correct EVs. Remove items that change stats before reading numbers. Do not mix trained and untrained data. For the cleanest result, use a higher level Pokémon with known effort values. Review any no-match warning before trusting the final score.
FAQs
1. What does this IV calculator do?
It estimates possible IV ranges by comparing your entered stats with official stat formulas used in Sun and Moon.
2. Why do I get an IV range?
Visible stats are rounded down. Because of rounding, several nearby IVs can produce the same final stat.
3. Does nature affect the result?
Yes. Nature changes most non-HP stats by ten percent. The calculator applies the selected nature automatically.
4. Why does a stat show no legal match?
The level, base stat, EV, nature, or observed stat may be wrong. Check all entries and calculate again.
5. Can I use level 100 values?
Yes. Level 100 values often give clearer IV results, especially when EVs are known correctly.
6. Does this handle EV training?
Yes. Enter the current EV for each stat. Unknown EVs can reduce accuracy and widen ranges.
7. What is a strong IV score?
A stat near 31 is excellent. A total near 186 means the Pokémon has a very strong overall spread.
8. Can I export my results?
Yes. Use the CSV button for spreadsheets or the PDF button for a clean printable report.