How to Use This Calculator
- 1. Enter paired X and Y values manually, paste from Excel, or upload a CSV/XLSX file.
- 2. Choose the correlation method that fits your data and measurement scale.
- 3. Read the coefficient, p-value, confidence intervals, and interpretation cards.
- 4. Inspect the scatter plot and residual plot before trusting a linear conclusion.
- 5. Expand the worked steps if you need a hand-calculation explanation for teaching or homework.
What Is the Correlation Coefficient?
A correlation coefficient measures how strongly two variables move together. Values near +1 indicate strong positive association, values near -1 indicate strong negative association, and values near 0 indicate little or no systematic relationship.
Pearson vs Spearman vs Kendall
How to Interpret Correlation Results
Interpret the sign first, then the magnitude, and only then the p-value. A statistically significant coefficient can still be practically weak, and a strong coefficient can still reflect correlation without causation.
Correlation Coefficient Formula
For significance testing, the Pearson-style t statistic is with .