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Percent Off Calculator
Find the sale price and exact savings for any discount percentage — instantly. Includes reverse modes to find the original price or the discount applied, plus a side-by-side comparison table.
Enter the original price and sale price to find what percentage was discounted.
Enter the sale price and the discount percentage to work out the original full price.
Enter a price and discount to see the sale price, savings and comparison table.
| Discount | You pay | You save |
|---|
How to Use the Percent Off Calculator
The calculator updates in real time as you type — no button needed. Furthermore, three separate modes cover every shopping scenario: forward calculation, finding the percentage applied and recovering the original price.
- % Off → Price (standard mode)Enter the original price and the discount percentage. The sale price, exact savings and a visual pay/save bar appear instantly. Furthermore, click any quick preset button — 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 40%, 50% or 70% — to fill the discount field without typing.
- Add sales tax or VAT (optional)Toggle the "Add sales tax / VAT" switch and enter your local rate. The calculator adds tax to the discounted price, showing the true checkout total. Furthermore, the breakdown table separates the discount, tax and final total so each component is visible.
- Find % Off (reverse mode A)Switch to the "Find % Off" tab. Enter the original price and the sale price you see advertised. The calculator works out what percentage discount was applied and the amount saved. Furthermore, this mode is useful for verifying whether an advertised discount matches the actual price reduction.
- Find Original Price (reverse mode B)Switch to the "Find Original" tab. Enter the sale price and the discount percentage. The calculator recovers the original full price before the discount was applied. Furthermore, use the quick preset buttons to test common discount percentages without retyping the sale price.
- Use the comparison tableBelow the main result, a comparison table shows the sale price and savings for every common discount percentage — 5% through 70% — on the same original price simultaneously. Furthermore, the row matching your current discount is highlighted green so you can compare your deal with alternatives at a glance.
What Does "Percent Off" Mean?
Percent off is a reduction in price expressed as a fraction of the original price. A 20% discount means you pay 80% of the original cost — the retailer reduces the price by one-fifth. Furthermore, percent off is the most common form of price promotion used by retailers worldwide, from high-street sales to online coupon codes.
Understanding percent off helps you compare deals meaningfully. A "$30 off" promotion and a "25% off" promotion on a $120 item give different results. Furthermore, $30 off equals 25% on $120, so in this case they are identical. However, on a $200 item, 25% off saves $50 — more than the flat $30 discount. Percentage discounts scale with price, while flat discounts do not.
Percent off promotions also interact with sales tax in ways that affect the total you pay at checkout. Most retailers apply discounts to the pre-tax price, then add tax to the discounted amount. Consequently, a 20% discount on a $100 item in a 10% tax region saves $20 on the item price but only $2 on the tax amount. Furthermore, the total saving versus full price including tax is $22 out of $110 — exactly 20%.
The Percent Off Formula — Three Versions
Three formulas cover every percent-off calculation scenario. Each is derived from the same relationship between original price, discount and sale price. Furthermore, understanding all three means you can solve for any unknown when you know the other two values.
Find sale price (standard)
Sale Price = Original × (1 − Discount% ÷ 100)
Example: 25% off $80 = $80 × 0.75 = $60. Furthermore, the savings amount is simply Original − Sale Price = $80 − $60 = $20.
Find % off applied
% Off = (Original − Sale) ÷ Original × 100
Example: original $80, sale price $60. Furthermore, ($80 − $60) ÷ $80 × 100 = 25% off was applied to arrive at $60.
Find original price
Original = Sale Price ÷ (1 − Discount% ÷ 100)
Example: sale price $60, discount 25%. Furthermore, $60 ÷ 0.75 = $80 original price before the 25% was removed.
The calculator applies the appropriate formula automatically based on which tab you select. Furthermore, the formula used for each calculation is shown in a code block below the result so you can verify the working yourself. Additionally, all results update in real time — there is no need to click a Calculate button.
How to Calculate Percent Off Manually
Mental maths shortcuts make percent-off calculations fast at the checkout. Furthermore, a few simple techniques handle the most common discount percentages without a calculator.
| Discount | Mental maths shortcut | Example on $80 | Sale price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% off | Move decimal left one place → savings | $80 → $8 saved | $72.00 |
| 20% off | Find 10%, then double it | $8 × 2 = $16 saved | $64.00 |
| 25% off | Divide by 4 | $80 ÷ 4 = $20 saved | $60.00 |
| 30% off | Find 10%, multiply by 3 | $8 × 3 = $24 saved | $56.00 |
| 50% off | Divide by 2 | $80 ÷ 2 = $40 saved | $40.00 |
| 15% off | Find 10%, add half of that | $8 + $4 = $12 saved | $68.00 |
| 75% off | Find 25% and subtract from original | $80 − $20 = $60 saved | $20.00 |
For less round percentages like 35% or 17%, the fastest approach is the decimal multiplication method. Multiply the price by (1 − percent ÷ 100). For 35% off $90: $90 × 0.65 = $58.50. Furthermore, this works for any percentage and is the same calculation the tool uses internally.
Stacked Discounts — How Multiple Discounts Work
Stacked discounts are applied one after another — each on the already-reduced price. They do not simply add together. Furthermore, this is one of the most common sources of confusion in retail pricing.
Consider a 30% off sale with an additional 20% off coupon. Many shoppers assume the total discount is 50%. However, 30% and 20% applied sequentially give an effective discount of 44%, not 50%. The calculation is: 1 − (0.70 × 0.80) = 1 − 0.56 = 0.44 = 44% effective discount. Furthermore, the order of the discounts does not matter — 20% then 30% gives the same result as 30% then 20%.
Retailers sometimes advertise stacked discounts precisely because the individual numbers look larger than the effective total. A "30% off, plus extra 20% off" headline draws more attention than "44% off". Furthermore, the Use the Find % Off tab to verify any stacked discount by entering the original price and the final price shown at checkout.
Common Discount Percentages — What They Really Save You
The same percentage off means very different things depending on the original price. Furthermore, understanding typical discount levels helps you evaluate whether a promotion is genuinely good value.
| Discount | On $50 | On $100 | On $500 | On $1,000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10% off | $5 saved | $10 saved | $50 saved | $100 saved |
| 20% off | $10 saved | $20 saved | $100 saved | $200 saved |
| 25% off | $12.50 saved | $25 saved | $125 saved | $250 saved |
| 30% off | $15 saved | $30 saved | $150 saved | $300 saved |
| 50% off | $25 saved | $50 saved | $250 saved | $500 saved |
| 70% off | $35 saved | $70 saved | $350 saved | $700 saved |
Retailers use specific discount thresholds intentionally. A 20% discount is the minimum most shoppers perceive as a meaningful sale. Furthermore, 25% and 30% discounts drive significantly higher purchase intent. Discounts above 50% are typically reserved for clearance, end-of-line stock or very competitive markets such as fast fashion.
For high-ticket items like electronics or furniture, even a 10% discount represents substantial savings. Additionally, a 10% discount on a $2,000 laptop saves $200 — more than a 50% discount on a $300 jacket saves. Furthermore, evaluating discounts relative to the absolute saving, not just the percentage, leads to smarter purchasing decisions.
Smart Shopping — How to Verify and Compare Discounts
Not all advertised discounts represent genuine value. Furthermore, knowing how retailers frame discounts — and how to verify them — helps you avoid paying more than necessary.
Check the Reference Price
The "original price" in a percent-off promotion must be the genuine selling price from a recent period. However, some retailers inflate the reference price to make discounts look larger. Furthermore, if a "$200 jacket is now $120 (40% off)" but the jacket rarely sold at $200, the real discount from the typical selling price is less impressive.
Compare Absolute Savings Across Retailers
When two retailers offer the same product at different "percent off" rates, calculate the actual sale price to compare. A 30% discount from $150 ($105) is better than a 40% discount from $160 ($96) only if the reference prices are genuine. Furthermore, the Find % Off tab in this tool quickly confirms the effective discount from any combination of original and sale prices.
Seasonal discount patterns
Electronics: best deals in November (Black Friday) and at new model launches. Clothing: deepest discounts at end of season (January, July). Furniture: Presidents Day, Memorial Day and Labor Day sales in the US. Furthermore, knowing the discount cycle helps you time purchases.
The anchoring effect
Showing a crossed-out original price alongside a discounted price is a deliberate psychological technique called anchoring. Furthermore, the higher the anchor price, the more impressive the discount feels — even when the anchor was never a realistic selling price. Always calculate the absolute saving to cut through the framing.
Frequently Asked Questions
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