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University of Washington
faculty.washington.edu › heagerty › Books › Biostatistics › TABLES › F-Tables
F-Tables
Upper one-sided 0.10 significance levels; two-sided 0.20 significance levels; 90 percent percentiles. Tabulated are critical values for the distribution. The column headings give the numerator degrees of freedom and the row headings the demoninator degrees of freedom. Lower one-sided critical values may be found from these tables by reversing the degrees of freedom and using the reciprocal of the tabled value at the same significance level (100 minus the percent for the percentile).
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UBalt
home.ubalt.edu › ntsbarsh › business-stat › StatistialTables.pdf pdf
STATISTICAL TABLES Cumulative normal distribution
TABLE A.2 · t Distribution: Critical Values of t · Significance level · Degrees of · Two-tailed test: 10% 5% 2% 1% 0.2% 0.1% freedom · One-tailed test: 5% 2.5% 1% 0.5% 0.1% 0.05% 1 · 6.314 · 12.706 · 31.821 · 63.657 · 318.309 · 636.619 · 2 · 2.920 ·
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MedCalc
medcalc.org › en › manual › t-distribution-table.php
t-distribution table (two-tailed) - MedCalc Manual
October 13, 2025 - Statistical tables: values of the t-distribution (two tailed).
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UCLA Statistics
stats.oarc.ucla.edu › other › mult-pkg › faq › general › faq-what-are-the-differences-between-one-tailed-and-two-tailed-tests
FAQ: What are the differences between one-tailed and two-tailed tests?
If you are using a significance level of 0.05, a two-tailed test allots half of your alpha to testing the statistical significance in one direction and half of your alpha to testing statistical significance in the other direction. This means that .025 is in each tail of the distribution of your test statistic. When using a two-tailed test, regardless of the direction of the relationship you hypothesize, you are testing for the possibility of the relationship in both directions.
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Statistics By Jim
statisticsbyjim.com › home › blog › f-table
F-table - Statistics By Jim
June 23, 2025 - Choose the F-table for your significance level. These three tables cover the most common significance levels of 0.10, 0.05, and 0.01. Columns specify the numerator degrees of freedom (DF1), while rows set the denominator’s (DF2).
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Shark Bay Ecosystem Research Project
faculty.fiu.edu › ~mcguckd › F Distribution Tables.pdf pdf
F Table for α = 0.10 \ df1=1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 15 20 24 30 40 60 120 ∞
F Table · for α = 0.05 · / df1=1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10 · 12 · 15 · 20 · 24 · 30 · 40 · 60 · 120 · ∞ · df2=1 · 161.4476 · 199.5 · 215.7073 · 224.5832 · 230.1619 · 233.986 · 236.7684 · 238.8827 · 240.5433 · 241.8817 · 243.906 ·
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Suppose you have a random sample of $n_1 = 30$ observations from $\mathsf{Norm}(\mu=100,\sigma=15)$ and $n_2 = 40$ observations from $\mathsf{Norm}(\mu=200,\sigma=15).$ Also suppose $S_1^2 = 244.8387,$ $S_2^2 = 370.9807,$ and $F = S_1^2/S_2^2 = 0.659977.$ We know (because we simulated the data) that $\sigma_1^2 = \sigma_2^2 = 225$ so that we hope not to reject $H_0: \sigma_1^2 = \sigma_2^2$ in favor of $H_1: \sigma_1^2 \ne \sigma_2^2.$ [Computations use R statistical software.]

y1 = rnorm(30, 100, 15);  v1 = var(y1)
y2 = rnorm(40, 200, 15);  v2 = var(y2)
f = v1/v2
v1; v2; f
[1] 244.8387  # 1st sample variance
[1] 370.9807  # 2nd
[1] 0.659977  # F-ratio

The critical values of a test at level 5% are 0.492 and 1.962, cutting 2.5% of the probability from the left and right tails, respectively, of $\mathsf{F}(29,39).$ Because $0.492 < F = 0.660 < 1.962$ we do not reject $H_0.$

qf(c(.025,.975), 29, 39)   # 'qf' is an F quantile function
[1] 0.4919648 1.9618689

The density of $\mathsf{F}(29,39),$ the observed value of $F$ (solid black) and the critical values (broken red) are shown below.

You can find the upper critical value in many printed F-distribution tables. However, to save space these printed tables typically do not show lower critical values (corresponding to quantiles below 0.5).


I believe that your second statement of critical values is incorrect, and guess it is based on an attempt to show how to find the lower critical values from printed tables.

By reversing the degrees of freedom, cutting $\alpha/2$ from the upper tail, and taking the reciprocal, you can find the lower critical value. In R the procedure for finding quantile 0.025 of $\mathsf{F}(29,39)$ can be illustrated as follows:

qf(.975, 39, 29);  1/qf(.975, 39, 29);  qf(.025, 29, 39) 
[1] 2.032666    # available in many printed tables
[1] 0.4919648   # reciprocal of above
[1] 0.4919648   # available directly in R, but not printed tables

Your second expression reverses the degrees of freedom but doesn't get the rest correct. Part of the difficulty may be that printed tables and books that rely on them use notation such as $F_{29,39;.025}$ to represent quantile 0.975 of $\mathsf{F}(29, 39),$ mentioning the percentage above in the right tail instead of the percentage below (as used for CDFs and quantiles). [One can only hope this '(upper) percentage point' notation falls into richly deserved disuse as we rely increasingly on software instead of printed tables.]


Addendum F-test in R:

 F test to compare two variances

data:  y1 and y2
F = 0.65998, num df = 29, denom df = 39, p-value = 0.2475
alternative hypothesis: true ratio of variances is not equal to 1
95 percent confidence interval:
  0.3364022 1.3415128
sample estimates:
ratio of variances 
          0.659977 
Find elsewhere
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Chemistry LibreTexts
chem.libretexts.org › learning objects › reference › reference tables › analytic references
Appendix 05: Critical Values for the F-Test - Chemistry LibreTexts
November 3, 2020 - The following tables provide values for F(0.05, νnum, νdenom) for one-tailed and for two-tailed F-tests.
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University of Regina
uregina.ca › ~gingrich › f.pdf pdf
Appendix K The F Distribution
When the significance level is α = 0.05, use the second F table.
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Aleks
static.aleks.com › aleks › resources › gibbs › 9781259755330_TableF.pdf pdf
T A B L E F The t Distribution Confidence intervals 80% 90% 95% 98% 99%
One tail · Area · 훼 · t · Two tails · Area · Area · +t · ‒t · 2 · 2 · 훼 · 훼 · unded to 1.28 in the textbook. unded to 1.65 in the textbook. unded to 2.33 in the textbook.
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Saylor
saylordotorg.github.io › text_introductory-statistics › s15-03-f-tests-for-equality-of-two-va.html
F-tests for Equality of Two Variances
In the context of Note 11.27 "Example 6", suppose Type A test strips are the current market leader and Type B test strips are a newly improved version of Type A. Test, at the 10% level of significance, whether the data given in Table 11.16 "Two Types of Test Strips" provide sufficient evidence to conclude that Type B test strips have better consistency (lower variance) than Type A test strips. ... Step 1. The test of hypotheses is now ... Step 2. The distribution is the F-distribution with degrees of freedom ... Step 3. The value of the test statistic is ... Step 4. The test is right-tailed.
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T Table
tdistributiontable.com › home
T Table - T Table
April 23, 2021 - So we will choose the one-tail row to map our alpha level. 3. Next, we look for the alpha value along the above highlighted row. Our alpha level for this example is 0.05. Let us map the same on the table · 4. Once that is done, let us map the degrees of freedom under the leftmost column of the table under (df) 5. The intersection of these two presents us with the critical value we are looking for
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Arab Psychology
scales.arabpsychology.com › psychological scales › f distribution table
F Distribution Table
September 1, 2024 - Two-tailed: Used for two-sided tests, where we consider both tails of the distribution (e.g., significantly different between groups).
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Omni Calculator
omnicalculator.com › statistics › critical-value
Critical Value Calculator
June 18, 2025 - Two-tailed test: critical value equals ±(1-α/2)-th quantile of the t distribution with N – 1 degrees of freedom. Open quantile tables for t-distribution. Look for the row corresponding to N – 1 degrees of freedom and for the column ...
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MedCalc
medcalc.org › manual › f-table.php
F Distribution critical values
April 4, 2025 - Values of the t-distribution (two-tailed) Values of the Chi-squared distribution · Logit transformation · Privacy Contact Site map · MedCalc Software Ltd Digimizer · © 2025 MedCalc Software Ltd · https://www.medcalc.org/manual/f-table.php© 2025 MedCalc Software Ltd
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Crafton Hills College
craftonhills.edu › current-students › tutoring-center › mathematics-tutoring › distribution_tables_normal_studentt_chisquared.pdf pdf
Standard Normal Distribution Probabilities Table
Standard Normal Distribution Probabilities Table · one-tail area · 0.25 · 0.125 · 0.1 · 0.075 · 0.05 · 0.025 · 0.01 · 0.005 · 0.0005 · two-tail area · 0.5 · 0.25 · 0.2 · 0.15 · 0.1 · 0.05 · 0.02 · 0.01 · 0.001 · confidence level · 0.5 · 0.75 · 0.8 · 0.85 · 0.9 · 0.95 ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/statistics › [q] double sided f-test
r/statistics on Reddit: [Q] Double sided F-test
October 28, 2024 -

If I have a significance level of alpha = 0.05, do I use 0.05 as the the alpha when choosing the critical value or alpha/2 since the test is double sided? Most sources I look at says that I should use 0.05 since the F-distribution is one sided, but how could that be? Is not the fact that it is either two or one sided completly neglected in that case?