# `rmse` -- Root mean squared error -- ``√MSE``. [Back to `point_metrics` axis](../axes/point_metrics.md) | [Back to L5](../index.md) | [Browse all options](../../browse_by_option.md) > Operational op under axis `point_metrics`, sub-layer `L5_A_metric_specification`, layer `l5`. > Standalone callable: `mf.functions.rmse`. ## Function signature ```python mf.functions.rmse( y_true: np.ndarray | pd.Series, y_pred: np.ndarray | pd.Series, ) -> float ``` ## Parameters | name | type | default | constraint | description | |---|---|---|---|---| | `y_true` | `np.ndarray | pd.Series` | — | — | Actual (realised) values. 1-D float array of length N. | | `y_pred` | `np.ndarray | pd.Series` | — | — | Forecast values. Must be the same length as y_true. | ## Returns `float` — scalar result. ## Behavior Point-forecast metric ``rmse``. Same ranking as MSE but expressed in target units (rather than squared target units). Standard reporting metric in macro / finance papers; pairs naturally with confidence-band charts since RMSE has the same units as the prediction interval. **When to use** Reporting forecast accuracy in target units. **When NOT to use** Heavy-tailed errors -- inherits MSE's outlier sensitivity. ## In recipe context Set ``params.point_metrics = "rmse"`` in the relevant layer to activate this op within a recipe: ```yaml # Layer L5 recipe fragment params: point_metrics: rmse ``` ## References * macroforecast design Part 3, L5: 'evaluation = (metric × benchmark × aggregation × decomposition × ranking).' * Diebold (2017) 'Forecasting in Economics, Business, Finance and Beyond', University of Pennsylvania (free online). ## Related ops See also: `mse`, `mae`, `medae`, `mape`, `theil_u1`, `theil_u2` (on the same axis). _Last reviewed 2026-05-05 by macroforecast author._