Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) Calculator
Calculate market concentration using the Herfindahl Index to assess competition levels
Add each firm’s market share (as percentage). The sum should equal 100%.
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How to Calculate Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI): Complete Guide
The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) is the most commonly used measure of market concentration, employed by economists, antitrust regulators, and business strategists worldwide. This comprehensive guide explains how to calculate HHI, interpret its results, and apply it to real-world market analysis.
What is the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index?
The HHI is a statistical measure that evaluates the degree of competition in a market by calculating the sum of the squares of the market shares of all firms in that market. It ranges from 0 (perfect competition) to 10,000 (pure monopoly), with higher values indicating greater market concentration.
The index was developed independently by economists Orris C. Herfindahl and Albert O. Hirschman in the 1940s. Today, it’s the primary tool used by:
- The U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission for merger reviews
- The European Commission’s competition authority
- Corporate strategists assessing competitive landscapes
- Economic researchers studying market structures
The HHI Formula
Where:
- s = market share of each firm (expressed as a decimal)
- n = number of firms in the market
For example, if a market has three firms with shares of 50%, 30%, and 20%, the HHI would be:
(0.5)² + (0.3)² + (0.2)² = 0.25 + 0.09 + 0.04 = 0.38 or 3,800
Step-by-Step Calculation Process
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Identify the relevant market
Define the product market (what products/services) and geographic market (where they’re sold). This is crucial as HHI results vary dramatically based on market definition.
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Determine market shares
Collect data on each firm’s market share, typically measured by:
- Revenue share
- Unit sales share
- Capacity share
- Employment share (for labor markets)
Shares should sum to 100%. For our calculator, enter percentages (e.g., 25 for 25%).
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Convert to decimals
Convert each percentage share to its decimal equivalent by dividing by 100.
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Square each share
Multiply each decimal share by itself.
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Sum the squares
Add up all the squared shares to get the HHI.
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Multiply by 10,000 (optional)
Some practitioners multiply by 10,000 to express the index as a whole number between 0 and 10,000. Our calculator automatically handles this conversion.
Interpreting HHI Results
The U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission use these general guidelines for interpreting HHI values:
| HHI Range | Market Type | Competition Level | Regulatory Implications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 1,500 | Unconcentrated | High competition | Mergers unlikely to raise concerns |
| 1,500 to 2,500 | Moderately concentrated | Moderate competition | Mergers may raise concerns |
| Above 2,500 | Highly concentrated | Low competition | Mergers likely to face scrutiny |
For example, the U.S. wireless telecommunications market had an HHI of approximately 2,600 in 2023, indicating a highly concentrated market dominated by three major carriers (Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile).
Change in HHI (ΔHHI)
Antitrust authorities often examine the change in HHI (ΔHHI) resulting from proposed mergers. The general guidelines are:
- ΔHHI below 100: Unlikely to raise competitive concerns
- ΔHHI between 100-200: Potential concerns in concentrated markets
- ΔHHI above 200: Likely to raise significant competitive concerns
Effective Number of Firms (N)
The HHI can be converted to the “effective number of firms” (N) using this formula:
Where HHI is expressed as a decimal (divide by 10,000 if using the 0-10,000 scale).
For example:
- An HHI of 1,800 → N ≈ 5.56 (equivalent to 5-6 equal-sized firms)
- An HHI of 3,000 → N ≈ 3.33 (equivalent to 3 equal-sized firms)
- An HHI of 10,000 → N = 1 (monopoly)
Real-World Examples of HHI
| Industry | Year | HHI | Dominant Firms | Regulatory Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Wireless Telecommunications | 2023 | 2,600 | Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile | Highly concentrated |
| U.S. Beer Production | 2022 | 2,800 | Anheuser-Busch, Molson Coors | Highly concentrated |
| U.S. Airline Industry | 2023 | 1,800 | American, Delta, United, Southwest | Moderately concentrated |
| U.S. Search Engines | 2023 | 8,500 | Near monopoly | |
| U.S. Coffee Shops | 2023 | 1,200 | Starbucks, Dunkin’, local shops | Unconcentrated |
Limitations of the HHI
While the HHI is the standard measure of market concentration, it has several limitations:
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Market definition challenges
The HHI is highly sensitive to how the market is defined. Narrow definitions can overstate concentration, while broad definitions can understate it.
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Ignores barriers to entry
The HHI doesn’t account for how easy it is for new firms to enter the market, which can significantly affect competition.
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Static measure
It provides a snapshot but doesn’t show trends over time or potential future competition.
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Assumes symmetry
The HHI treats all firms symmetrically, not accounting for differences in cost structures or product differentiation.
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Data requirements
Accurate market share data can be difficult to obtain, especially in rapidly changing industries.
Alternative Measures of Market Concentration
While the HHI is the most commonly used measure, economists also use these alternatives:
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Concentration Ratio (CRₙ)
The combined market share of the top n firms (typically CR₄ or CR₈). Simpler but less comprehensive than HHI.
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Lerner Index
Measures market power by comparing price to marginal cost. Higher values indicate more market power.
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Rosenbluth Index
Similar to HHI but gives more weight to smaller firms.
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Entropy Measure
Uses information theory to measure concentration, sensitive to the number of firms.
Practical Applications of HHI
1. Merger Review and Antitrust Enforcement
The primary use of HHI is in merger review by competition authorities. The U.S. Horizontal Merger Guidelines use these thresholds:
- Safe Harbor: Mergers resulting in HHI below 1,500 are unlikely to raise concerns
- Potential Concerns: Mergers resulting in HHI between 1,500-2,500 with ΔHHI above 100
- Presumption of Anticompetitive: Mergers resulting in HHI above 2,500 with ΔHHI above 200
For example, when AT&T attempted to acquire T-Mobile in 2011, the deal was blocked partly because it would have increased the U.S. wireless HHI from about 2,500 to over 3,000.
2. Industry Analysis and Competitive Strategy
Businesses use HHI to:
- Assess the competitive intensity of markets they’re entering
- Identify potential acquisition targets that wouldn’t raise antitrust concerns
- Monitor changes in market structure over time
- Develop pricing strategies based on market power
3. Economic Research
Economists use HHI to study:
- The relationship between market concentration and innovation
- How concentration affects prices and consumer welfare
- The impact of regulation on market structure
- International comparisons of market concentration
Calculating HHI with Different Data Sources
The accuracy of your HHI calculation depends on the quality of your market share data. Common data sources include:
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Government Statistics
Agencies like the U.S. Census Bureau, Eurostat, or national statistical offices often publish industry concentration data.
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Industry Reports
Market research firms (IBISWorld, Statista, Nielsen) provide market share estimates for many industries.
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Company Financial Reports
Public companies disclose revenue figures that can be used to estimate market shares.
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Trade Associations
Industry groups often collect and publish market data for their members.
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Survey Data
For some markets, consumer or business surveys may be the best source of market share information.
Advanced HHI Applications
Weighted HHI
Some analysts use a weighted HHI where firms are weighted by additional factors like:
- Geographic presence
- Product line breadth
- Technological capabilities
HHI for Multi-Product Firms
For firms operating in multiple markets, you can calculate:
- Overall HHI: Treating all products as one market
- Product-specific HHIs: Calculating separately for each product market
Dynamic HHI Analysis
Tracking HHI over time can reveal:
- Trends in market concentration
- The impact of regulatory changes
- Effects of technological disruption
Common Mistakes in HHI Calculation
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Incorrect market definition
Too narrow or too broad market definitions can lead to misleading HHI values.
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Using revenue instead of market shares
HHI requires market shares (percentages), not absolute revenue figures.
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Ignoring small firms
Even firms with small market shares contribute to the HHI and should be included.
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Double-counting affiliated firms
Subsidiaries or affiliated companies should be treated as part of their parent company.
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Using outdated data
Market shares can change rapidly, especially in technology sectors.
Regulatory Frameworks Using HHI
United States
The U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission use HHI as the primary screen for horizontal mergers. Their Horizontal Merger Guidelines provide detailed thresholds and analysis frameworks.
European Union
The European Commission uses HHI in its merger assessment guidelines, though it places more emphasis on qualitative factors than the U.S. approach.
Other Jurisdictions
Most developed countries use HHI in their competition analysis, including:
- Canada (Competition Bureau)
- United Kingdom (Competition and Markets Authority)
- Australia (Australian Competition & Consumer Commission)
- Japan (Japan Fair Trade Commission)
Case Studies in HHI Application
1. Blocked AT&T/T-Mobile Merger (2011)
The proposed $39 billion merger between AT&T and T-Mobile would have:
- Increased the U.S. wireless HHI from ~2,500 to ~3,000
- Reduced the number of national carriers from 4 to 3
- Resulted in a ΔHHI of over 800 points
The DOJ successfully blocked the merger, arguing it would “substantially lessen competition” in violation of the Clayton Act.
2. Approved Disney/Fox Merger (2019)
Despite creating a media giant, the Disney/Fox merger was approved because:
- The relevant markets (theatrical distribution, cable networks) had HHIs below 2,500
- ΔHHI increases were modest due to the presence of other major players (Netflix, Amazon, Comcast)
- Divestitures were required for certain assets
3. European Commission’s Google Cases
The EC has used HHI analysis in several cases against Google:
- Search market HHI exceeding 8,000 (near monopoly)
- Android mobile OS market HHI over 6,000
- Online advertising markets with HHIs between 2,000-4,000
These high concentration levels contributed to findings of dominance under EU competition law.
Calculating HHI for Different Market Structures
Perfect Competition
In a perfectly competitive market with many small firms:
- Each firm has a market share approaching 0%
- HHI approaches 0
- N approaches infinity
Monopolistic Competition
Markets with many firms selling differentiated products:
- Typical HHI: 500-1,500
- Example: Restaurants, retail clothing
Oligopoly
Markets dominated by a few large firms:
- Typical HHI: 1,500-3,000
- Example: Automobiles, airlines, telecommunications
Monopoly
Single-firm markets:
- HHI = 10,000
- N = 1
- Example: Local utilities, some patented drugs
HHI and Market Power
While HHI measures market concentration, economists often want to understand its relationship to market power. Key insights:
- HHI ≠ Market Power: High HHI suggests potential for market power but doesn’t prove its exercise
- Non-linear relationship: The impact of concentration on prices increases with HHI
- Threshold effects: Most price effects occur when HHI exceeds 1,800-2,000
Empirical studies suggest:
- An HHI increase from 1,000 to 1,800 is associated with price increases of 3-5%
- An HHI above 2,500 is associated with prices 5-10% above competitive levels
Software Tools for HHI Calculation
While our calculator provides a simple interface, professionals often use:
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Stata: Econometric software with HHI calculation commands
// Stata code for HHI gen share_sq = share^2 egen hhi = total(share_sq), by(market) -
R: Open-source statistical software
# R code for HHI hhi <- sum(market_shares^2) -
Python: Using pandas for market analysis
# Python code for HHI import pandas as pd df['share_squared'] = df['market_share']**2 hhi = df['share_squared'].sum() -
Excel: Simple spreadsheet calculations
=SUM(A2:A10^2) // Where A2:A10 contains decimal market shares
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What's the difference between HHI and CR4?
The Concentration Ratio (CR4) simply adds the market shares of the top 4 firms. HHI considers all firms and gives more weight to larger firms (since squaring amplifies larger numbers). HHI is generally preferred as it uses more information and is more sensitive to market structure changes.
2. How often should HHI be recalculated?
For regulatory purposes, HHI is typically calculated annually. For business strategy, quarterly updates may be appropriate in fast-moving industries. Always recalculate after:
- Major mergers or acquisitions
- Entry/exit of significant competitors
- Regulatory changes affecting market structure
3. Can HHI be used for international comparisons?
Yes, but with caution. Differences in market definition across countries can make direct comparisons misleading. The OECD publishes harmonized HHI data for many industries to facilitate international comparisons.
4. What's a "good" HHI for consumers?
From a consumer welfare perspective, lower HHI values (below 1,500) are generally better as they indicate more competition, which typically leads to lower prices, better quality, and more innovation. However, some concentrated markets (HHI 1,500-2,500) can also deliver consumer benefits through economies of scale.
5. How does HHI relate to the Lerner Index?
The Lerner Index (L = (P-MC)/P) measures market power directly, while HHI measures the structural conditions that may lead to market power. Empirical studies find a positive correlation between HHI and Lerner Index values, though the relationship isn't perfect due to factors like cost structures and demand elasticity.
Conclusion
The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index remains the gold standard for measuring market concentration due to its comprehensive nature and sensitivity to market structure changes. Whether you're a business strategist assessing competitive landscapes, a regulator evaluating mergers, or an economist studying market dynamics, understanding how to calculate and interpret HHI is an essential skill.
Remember that while HHI provides valuable quantitative insights, it should be used alongside qualitative analysis of factors like:
- Barriers to entry and expansion
- Buyer power in the market
- Potential for disruptive innovation
- Regulatory environment
For the most accurate analysis, always use the most current and comprehensive market share data available, and consider consulting competition economics experts for complex market definitions or high-stakes decisions.