I ran a [query](https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/revision/210226/274076/test) to select distinct posts that have been closed. It gave me a result of ***355,438***. I then ran a [query](https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/210227/test) to select distinct posts that have been reopened which gave me a result of ***14,437***. So my calculator gives me a ***1 in 24.6*** (*4.17%*) chance of a question being reopened after it has been closed. ----- **EDIT :** @Braiam said > Actually the proportion is off, since most close questions are > deleted, hence not in the data dump. I ran another [query](https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/210273/missing-questions) looking for deleted questions. It gave me a result of ***1,169,980***. Adding that result to the first result gives us 1,525,418 questions that are closed or deleted. So that'd be a ***1 in 105.7*** *(0.95%)* chance of a question being reopened after it has been closed or deleted. Not all questions that are deleted have been closed. Spam posts don't get closed, they get deleted. Questions can also be auto-deleted by the system without having been closed. So to really answer your question, it's somewhere between ***0.95%*** and ***4.17%*** chance of a question being reopened after it has been closed. ----- > should anything be done to re-open questions more often? Anytime that the OP edits their question of a closed post, it gets sent to the reopen queue. Anytime that someone spots a closed question that they choose to vote to reopen, it goes to the reopen queue. So I'd say more than likely, if a question is worth reopening it likely will be in *most* circumstances.