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MLB Batting Splits 2025

Performance splits by handedness, home/away, and situational categories.

Batting splits break down a hitter's performance across different game situations. Platoon splits (vs LHP/RHP) are the most predictive for DFS and prop betting. Minimum 10 at-bats displayed.
.657 OPS
AVG .279
OBP .333
SLG .324
HR 0
AB 68
H 19
RBI 3
.656 OPS
AVG .238
OBP .319
SLG .338
HR 0
AB 80
H 19
RBI 5
.655 OPS
AVG .227
OBP .337
SLG .318
HR 2
AB 88
H 20
RBI 12
.651 OPS
AVG .217
OBP .302
SLG .349
HR 2
AB 83
H 18
RBI 13
.650 OPS
AVG .203
OBP .226
SLG .424
HR 4
AB 59
H 12
RBI 12
AVG .217
OBP .337
SLG .313
HR 1
AB 83
H 18
RBI 8
.649 OPS
AVG .217
OBP .345
SLG .304
HR 0
AB 23
H 5
RBI 5
.647 OPS
AVG .224
OBP .274
SLG .373
HR 2
AB 67
H 15
RBI 13
.646 OPS
AVG .221
OBP .288
SLG .358
HR 3
AB 95
H 21
RBI 12
.640 OPS
AVG .253
OBP .345
SLG .295
HR 1
AB 95
H 24
RBI 5
.637 OPS
AVG .262
OBP .309
SLG .328
HR 1
AB 61
H 16
RBI 7
.636 OPS
AVG .205
OBP .266
SLG .370
HR 2
AB 73
H 15
RBI 7
.636 OPS
AVG .181
OBP .289
SLG .347
HR 3
AB 72
H 13
RBI 6
.628 OPS
AVG .224
OBP .286
SLG .342
HR 2
AB 76
H 17
RBI 8
.626 OPS
AVG .174
OBP .321
SLG .304
HR 0
AB 23
H 4
RBI 1
AVG .207
OBP .281
SLG .345
HR 0
AB 29
H 6
RBI 1
.625 OPS
AVG .213
OBP .311
SLG .315
HR 2
AB 89
H 19
RBI 7
.609 OPS
AVG .222
OBP .275
SLG .333
HR 0
AB 63
H 14
RBI 7
.609 OPS
AVG .205
OBP .294
SLG .315
HR 2
AB 73
H 15
RBI 9
.607 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .243
SLG .364
HR 2
AB 33
H 6
RBI 4
.606 OPS
AVG .240
OBP .326
SLG .280
HR 0
AB 75
H 18
RBI 3
AVG .243
OBP .333
SLG .270
HR 0
AB 37
H 9
RBI 3
.601 OPS
AVG .241
OBP .290
SLG .310
HR 0
AB 29
H 7
RBI 6
.601 OPS
AVG .258
OBP .343
SLG .258
HR 0
AB 31
H 8
RBI 3
.599 OPS
AVG .259
OBP .291
SLG .309
HR 0
AB 81
H 21
RBI 6
.598 OPS
AVG .209
OBP .239
SLG .358
HR 3
AB 67
H 14
RBI 12
.597 OPS
AVG .135
OBP .273
SLG .324
HR 2
AB 37
H 5
RBI 4
.594 OPS
AVG .187
OBP .274
SLG .320
HR 2
AB 75
H 14
RBI 7
.589 OPS
AVG .226
OBP .268
SLG .321
HR 1
AB 53
H 12
RBI 2
.588 OPS
AVG .210
OBP .282
SLG .306
HR 1
AB 62
H 13
RBI 8
.586 OPS
AVG .250
OBP .292
SLG .294
HR 0
AB 68
H 17
RBI 0
.583 OPS
AVG .208
OBP .305
SLG .278
HR 1
AB 72
H 15
RBI 8
.580 OPS
AVG .176
OBP .283
SLG .297
HR 3
AB 91
H 16
RBI 9
.576 OPS
AVG .263
OBP .295
SLG .281
HR 0
AB 57
H 15
RBI 7
.573 OPS
AVG .194
OBP .253
SLG .319
HR 2
AB 72
H 14
RBI 6
.567 OPS
AVG .234
OBP .333
SLG .234
HR 0
AB 47
H 11
RBI 7
.562 OPS
AVG .212
OBP .289
SLG .273
HR 0
AB 33
H 7
RBI 3
.561 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .333
SLG .227
HR 0
AB 22
H 4
RBI 0
.556 OPS
AVG .231
OBP .268
SLG .288
HR 0
AB 52
H 12
RBI 5
.555 OPS
AVG .190
OBP .269
SLG .286
HR 0
AB 21
H 4
RBI 3
.551 OPS
AVG .143
OBP .277
SLG .274
HR 0
AB 84
H 12
RBI 3
.550 OPS
AVG .188
OBP .263
SLG .287
HR 2
AB 101
H 19
RBI 16
.548 OPS
AVG .158
OBP .179
SLG .368
HR 2
AB 38
H 6
RBI 7
AVG .190
OBP .254
SLG .293
HR 1
AB 58
H 11
RBI 6
.538 OPS
AVG .120
OBP .258
SLG .280
HR 1
AB 25
H 3
RBI 4
.536 OPS
AVG .211
OBP .259
SLG .276
HR 1
AB 76
H 16
RBI 3
.532 OPS
AVG .150
OBP .245
SLG .288
HR 3
AB 80
H 12
RBI 6
.523 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .250
SLG .273
HR 0
AB 22
H 4
RBI 0
AVG .259
OBP .259
SLG .259
HR 0
AB 27
H 7
RBI 1
.519 OPS
AVG .161
OBP .325
SLG .194
HR 0
AB 31
H 5
RBI 4

Understanding Monthly Splits

Monthly splits track a hitter's performance across the season. April through October each bring different conditions — weather, fatigue, roster composition, and pitcher workload all shift as the season progresses. Identifying hot and cold streaks is essential for in-season DFS and betting.

Early Season (March-April)

Cold weather suppresses offense league-wide. Pitchers are often fresher and throwing harder. Small sample sizes make early-season splits volatile — a 10-game hot streak in April can produce a misleading .400 AVG. Weight these splits cautiously until June.

Peak Season (May-August)

Warm weather boosts offense, and sample sizes become meaningful. By July, monthly splits reveal real trends — a hitter who consistently rakes in summer months is a reliable warm-weather producer. August fatigue can affect some players, especially catchers and older veterans.

Stretch Run (September-October)

September roster expansions change matchup dynamics. October splits only apply to playoff teams. For DFS and betting, September splits are useful for identifying hitters who finish strong under pressure — these "second-half" hitters are often undervalued by the market.

Data Source & Methodology

Batting splits sourced from MLB Stats API. Stats reflect current season data and update daily as games are played.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are monthly batting splits predictive?
Monthly splits are more descriptive than predictive for individual months. However, consistent patterns across multiple seasons (e.g., a hitter who always rakes in July-August) can signal real tendencies. Use monthly splits to identify hot streaks and cold spells within the current season rather than predicting future months.
Why do hitters perform differently by month?
Weather is the biggest factor — cold April air suppresses fly balls, while summer heat helps the ball carry. Pitcher fatigue accumulates over the season, often boosting hitter stats in August-September. Some hitters also have personal patterns tied to conditioning, injury history, or mechanical adjustments.
How should I use monthly splits for DFS?
Use current-month splits to identify who is hot right now. A hitter slashing .350/.400/.600 in the current month is likely seeing the ball well and making hard contact. Combine monthly form with matchup data for the strongest DFS plays. Don't chase month-old hot streaks that have already cooled.
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