Knowing how much damage your character deals on average each round separates optimized D&D 5e builds from those that just feel powerful at the table. Damage Per Round — commonly called DPR — is a calculated figure that accounts for your chance to hit, your average damage roll, and the bonus damage you squeeze out of critical hits. With a solid DPR number in hand you can compare two builds objectively, decide between feats, and negotiate action economy trade-offs without relying on gut feel.

How D&D Damage Is Calculated

Every attack in D&D 5e has two components: the to-hit roll and the damage roll. The to-hit roll is a d20 plus your attack bonus vs. the target's Armor Class (AC). If you beat the AC you deal the damage roll; if not, you deal nothing. Crits — a natural 20 on the die — always hit and double the number of damage dice rolled (not the flat modifiers).

Standard DPR analysis assumes a fixed target AC. Most published encounters use AC 14–17 for challenging fights against monsters of comparable Challenge Rating. AC 15 is the conventional benchmark for martial character optimization at mid levels.

The DPR Formula: To-Hit × Average Damage

The core formula breaks into three parts: normal hits, critical hits, and misses.

Hit chance       = (21 - AC + attack bonus) / 20   [clamped 0.05 to 0.95]
Crit chance      = 0.05  (natural 20 only, base)
Miss chance      = 1 - hit chance

Normal hit DPR   = (hit chance - crit chance) × average damage
Crit DPR         = crit chance × (average damage + extra crit dice average)
Total DPR        = Normal hit DPR + Crit DPR

Average damage for a single die follows (max + 1) / 2. A d6 averages 3.5, a d8 averages 4.5, a d10 averages 5.5, a d12 averages 6.5. Flat modifiers (Strength/Dex, magic bonuses) are added in full to every hit — normal and critical alike.

Worked example — Level 5 Fighter, Great Sword, +7 to hit vs. AC 15:

  • Hit chance: (21 - 15 + 7) / 20 = 13/20 = 0.65
  • Crit chance: 0.05
  • Normal hit avg damage: 2d6 + 5 = 7 + 5 = 12
  • Crit extra dice: 2d6 = 7 avg additional
  • Normal hit DPR: (0.65 - 0.05) × 12 = 7.20
  • Crit DPR: 0.05 × (12 + 7) = 0.95
  • Total DPR per attack: 8.15 — with Extra Attack that is 16.30 per round.

Critical Hit Math

Critical hits double the number of damage dice, not flat bonuses. This means high-dice builds (Rogue Sneak Attack, Divine Smite) benefit far more from crits than fighters relying on flat modifiers. The Champion Fighter subclass extends crits to a natural 19 (crit range 19–20), raising crit chance to 10%.

SourceNormal DiceCrit Extra DiceAvg Crit Bonus
Greatsword (2d6)2d6+2d6+7
Rapier + 5d6 Sneak1d8 + 5d6+1d8 + 5d6+22
Divine Smite (2nd slot)+2d8+2d8+9
Divine Smite (3rd slot)+3d8+3d8+13.5
Paladin Greatsword + Smite 3rd2d6 + 3d8+2d6 + 3d8+20.5
Eldritch Blast (Hex + Agonizing)1d10 + 1d6 + CHA+1d10 + 1d6+8.5

Rogues particularly benefit: a Level 11 Rogue with 6d6 Sneak Attack gains 21 extra average damage on a crit, which is nearly a full extra attack's worth of damage from a single lucky roll.

Comparing Martial vs Caster DPR by Level

These figures assume consistent target AC 15, +proficiency + ability mod to hit, optimized subclass features active. Spellcaster DPR assumes an attack spell (Eldritch Blast, Scorching Ray) rather than save-or-half spells, which resist comparison.

LevelFighter (GWF)Rogue (Assassin)Paladin (Oathbreaker)Warlock (Hex+EB)Wizard (Firebolt)
16.24.86.05.14.0
516.316.118.413.26.5
820.122.822.716.48.2
1127.433.526.122.310.5
1738.641.234.834.714.1
2043.146.039.538.216.0

Rogues scale well because Sneak Attack dice increase every odd level. Paladins front-load burst DPR via spell slots on Divine Smite but run out of slots in prolonged fights. Fighters shine in long adventuring days because they need no resources for their baseline DPR.

Feat & Ability Score Optimization

Every +2 to your primary attack stat (Strength or Dexterity) increases your attack bonus by +1 and your damage by +1 per hit. At Level 5 with two attacks vs. AC 15 (65% hit rate), a +1 damage bonus per attack adds approximately 1.3 DPR — modest compared to feats.

Great Weapon Master (GWM): Allows –5 to hit for +10 damage on each hit. Net DPR value depends heavily on hit chance. Break-even point: hit chance must exceed 50% for the trade to be positive. At 65% hit chance, +10 damage per hit at –25% effective hits (65% → 40% net of the –5 penalty translating to roughly 20% hit chance loss at a typical bonus) yields about +2–4 DPR per attack at Level 5.

Sharpshooter: Same math as GWM applied to ranged attacks. More consistent value in fights where enemies have cover.

Polearm Master (PAM): Bonus action attack with d4 + modifier. Adds 5–7 DPR at Level 8 with Sentinel combination for battlefield control.

War Caster / Sentinel: Opportunity attack reliability — situational rather than consistent DPR.

Common Builds Ranked by DPR

Ranking assumes Level 11, optimized gear, no magical items beyond a +1 weapon, and standard point-buy stats (18 primary stat at Level 8 via ASI).

RankBuildKey FeaturesAvg DPR (vs AC 15)Burst Potential
1Gloomstalker Ranger 5 / Assassin Rogue 6Surprise round 3 attacks + full Sneak58+ (surprise) / 22 regularVery high
2Paladin 6 / Warlock 5 (Hexblade)Pact weapon + Smite + Hex42High (slots)
3Champion Fighter 11 (GWM)19-20 crit range, 3 attacks38Medium
4Open Hand Monk 11Flurry + Stunning Strike setup34Medium
5Thief Rogue 116d6 Sneak Attack33Low
6Warlock 11 (Hex + Agonizing EB)3 beams + modifier31Low
7Hunter Ranger 11 (Volley)AoE option29Medium
8Berserker Barbarian 11Bonus attack + Rage28Low

The Gloomstalker/Assassin multiclass dominates burst scenarios because Assassin's auto-crit on surprised enemies stacks with Gloomstalker's extra attack on turn one. Outside of surprise rounds the build drops to tier 3. For reliable consistent output across a full adventuring day of 6–8 encounters, the Fighter's Action Surge and no resource dependency keeps it competitive through attrition.

DPR math ultimately serves as a planning tool, not a guarantee. Real tables introduce terrain, concentration checks, action economy disruptions, and player creativity that no spreadsheet captures. Use DPR to pressure-test your assumptions — then let the dice do the storytelling.