Discount Calculator
Calculate discounted price, amount saved, and the gross margin impact of any discount. Three modes: forward (find sale price), reverse (find discount %), and original price recovery. Enter your cost to see margin erosion and break-even volume.
Why use the LazyTools calculator?
Built around gaps in competitor tools -- professional-grade analysis for investors, analysts and business owners.
How to use this calculator
How we compare to alternatives
| Feature | LazyTools | OmniCalc | CalculatorSoup | Shopify |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Three modes + margin impact | Yes | No | No | No |
| Formula shown | Yes | Partial | Yes | No |
| Multi-mode | Yes | Partial | No | No |
| Free, no signup | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Discount Calculator: Complete Guide to Pricing and Savings
A discount calculator reveals far more than just a sale price. For shoppers it confirms the true saving. For retailers and sales professionals it exposes the real cost of discounting to gross margin and the incremental volume required to compensate -- a cost that is almost always larger than intuition suggests before the numbers are run.
How to calculate discounted price: three essential formulas
The forward formula calculates sale price: Sale Price = Original x (1 - Discount/100). For $120 with 30% off: $120 x 0.70 = $84, saving $36. The reverse formula finds the discount: Discount % = (Original - Sale) / Original x 100. Item was $250, now $175: (250-175)/250 x 100 = 30% off. The third formula recovers the original price: Original = Sale / (1 - Discount/100). A product at $680 after 15% off was originally $680 / 0.85 = $800.
The key concept is the multiplier: (1 - discount/100). For 25% off, the multiplier is 0.75 -- the sale price is 75% of original. For 50% off, it is 0.50. For 20% off, 0.80. Chaining multipliers correctly handles stacked discounts: 20% then 10% off = 0.80 x 0.90 = 0.72 of original = 28% total off, not 30%. This compounding is why sequential discounts always produce less combined saving than their apparent additive total, and why the Multi-Discount Calculator exists to handle these precisely.
How discounts erode gross margin: the maths every business owner needs
At 40% gross margin: original price $100, cost $60, profit $40. Apply 20% discount: price drops to $80, cost unchanged at $60, profit falls to $20, new margin = 20/80 = 25%. A 20% price cut caused a 15 percentage point margin collapse -- from 40% to 25%. The break-even volume multiplier = original margin / new margin = 40/25 = 1.60. You need 60% more units at the discounted price just to earn the same gross profit as before. That is a very high bar for a 20% discount.
The margin impact worsens as your starting margin decreases. At 25% margin, a 10% discount reduces margin to 16.7%, requiring 50% more volume to break even. At 60% margin, the same 10% discount reduces margin to 55.6%, requiring only 8% more volume. High-margin businesses can afford to discount; low-margin businesses cannot. Before every discount decision, run this calculation. If the required volume lift is not realistically achievable from price elasticity, the discount destroys value and should be reconsidered or redesigned as a conditional rebate instead.
Discount benchmarks and when to use each level
Consumer retail norms: 10-20% is a standard promotional discount -- creates urgency, drives incremental purchase, manageable margin impact. 30-40% is clearance territory -- moves slow inventory, but requires significant volume lift to break even. 50% and above signals end-of-season liquidation or distress pricing, acceptable when cash recovery from slow stock outweighs the margin sacrifice. Permanent 50%+ discounts indicate a pricing or positioning problem that discounting alone cannot solve.
B2B sales discount norms: 5-15% negotiated from list price in most industries; up to 25-30% for large strategic accounts. SaaS annual commitment discounts: 15-20% off the monthly rate is standard, reflecting the cash flow and churn-reduction value of annual contracts. Wholesale to retail: 40-60% off recommended retail price, because the retailer needs sufficient margin to operate. Understanding where your discount sits relative to category norms helps calibrate both the financial impact and the message it sends to customers about your product value.
How to design smarter discount strategies
The most effective discount strategies use the minimum discount needed to achieve the desired customer behaviour. Start at 10% and increase only when conversion data confirms it is insufficient. Use time-limited windows (48-hour flash sales, end-of-month closing pushes) rather than always-available discounts, which train customers to wait and permanently erode price anchors. Present the dollar saving prominently for high-value items ($30 off sounds more impactful than 10% off on a $300 item) and percentage savings for lower-price items where the dollar amount looks small.
Segment discount strategy by customer type. New customer acquisition discounts can be deeper because future lifetime value justifies a margin sacrifice on the first transaction -- calculate the maximum sustainable acquisition discount as: (CLV x Target LTV:CAC - Margin at Full Price) / Units. Retention discounts should be calibrated to the margin cost of churn, not the discount margin itself. Never offer deeper discounts to new customers than to loyal returning customers -- the discovery destroys loyalty and creates resentment that lasts far beyond any short-term acquisition benefit.
Common discount calculation mistakes
Stacking percentages additively: two 20% discounts are 36% off, not 40%. The correct method multiplies the remaining fractions: 0.80 x 0.80 = 0.64, so the customer pays 64% of original and saves 36%. Inflating original prices: UK, EU and many US states require that the reference price must have been the genuine price for a specified period (30 days in UK/EU). Using artificially high anchor prices to create large apparent discounts is regulated and increasingly enforced, with penalties that outweigh any short-term revenue benefit from the misleading promotion.
Ignoring volume requirements in the financial model: a promotional forecast based on pre-discount unit economics will overstate gross profit because each discounted unit generates less contribution. Always model the break-even volume and then assess whether that volume is achievable from realistic price elasticity. Post-promotion dips, where demand in the weeks following a promotion falls below baseline as customers use up stock purchased during the sale, are common and must be included in the full promotional ROI calculation to assess the net impact accurately.
Worked example: analysing a 25% promotional discount
A retailer plans 25% off on a product originally priced at $160. Cost = $80. Pre-promotion margin: (160-80)/160 = 50%. Sale price = $160 x 0.75 = $120. Sale margin = (120-80)/120 = 33.3%. Break-even volume multiplier = 50/33.3 = 1.50x. Pre-promotion weekly units: 80. Break-even weekly units: 120. Incremental units needed: 40 per week -- a 50% lift. At price elasticity of -1.5, a 25% price cut drives 37.5% volume increase -- slightly short of the 50% break-even target.
Reducing the discount to 20% (sale price $128, margin 37.5%): break-even multiplier = 50/37.5 = 1.33x, requiring 33% volume lift. At the same -1.5 elasticity, a 20% cut drives 30% volume increase -- close to break-even and more likely to be genuinely profitable when basket attachment and new customer acquisition value are included. The 5 percentage point difference in discount rate significantly changes the promotional economics. Always model both before committing to a promotional price point.
How to get more from discount analysis
Run this calculation every time you set a promotional price, approve a sales concession, or negotiate a volume deal. The pattern across multiple calculations reveals your average discount rate, the trend in margin impact, and whether your pricing strategy is tightening or loosening over time. A rising average discount rate is an early warning signal of weakening pricing power or inadequate negotiating discipline.
Compare discount rates and margin impacts across products, sales reps, customer segments and channels to identify where pricing discipline is strongest and where intervention is most needed. The sales rep with the lowest average discount rate and the highest close rate is your best pricing role model. The channel with the deepest average discount and the lowest margin contribution is the first candidate for pricing strategy review and renegotiation of channel terms.