About This Calculator
A z-score places a raw value on the standard normal scale. It tells how many standard deviations a value sits from the mean. This calculator finds cumulative area for one boundary or two boundaries. It supports direct z-scores and raw scores. That makes it useful for class work, reports, quality checks, and probability tables.
Why Cumulative Area Matters
Cumulative area is the probability under the normal curve. Left area shows P(Z ≤ z). Right area shows P(Z > z). Between area measures the probability between two limits. Outside area measures both tails beyond those limits. These outputs help compare scores, set cutoffs, and estimate rare events. Percent values are also shown, so results are easier to explain.
Advanced Options
You can enter x, mean, and standard deviation when your data is not already standardized. The tool converts x into z. It also calculates a second z value for intervals. Precision control lets you choose how many decimals appear. The density value shows curve height at the first boundary. The ratio view gives a quick “one in n” reading when the area is greater than zero.
Interpreting Results
Positive z-scores sit above the mean. Negative z-scores sit below the mean. A z-score near zero has left area near 0.5000. Very large positive z-scores have left areas near one. Very large negative z-scores have left areas near zero. For interval work, always check that the lower and upper limits match your problem. The calculator sorts interval limits before finding the enclosed area.
Accuracy Notes
The normal curve has no simple elementary antiderivative. This page uses a common numerical approximation to the standard normal distribution function. Results are suitable for study, planning, and general analysis. For regulated decisions, verify values with approved statistical software or official tables. Use matching units for raw scores, mean, and standard deviation. Keep the standard deviation greater than zero.
Best Uses
Use it when a question asks for percentile rank, lower tail probability, upper tail risk, middle coverage, or extreme observation rate. Teachers can check homework examples. Analysts can describe process limits. Students can compare textbook table values. The downloadable files preserve inputs and final numbers for later review and clean simple audit trails.