Percentage Calculator — 5 Modes, Instant Results | LazyTools

Percentage Calculator

Five percentage modes in one tool — what is X% of Y, X is what % of Y, percentage change, reverse percentage and percentage difference. Every mode shows the step-by-step formula. Instant results on every keystroke.

5 calculation modes Step-by-step formulas Real-time results Free · instant · no login

Percentage Calculator Tool

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✦ Features

Five percentage modes — all in one free calculator

Most percentage calculators offer one or two modes. LazyTools gives you all five — with step-by-step formulas shown for every calculation, and real-time results that update as you type.

What is X% of Y?
The most common percentage calculation. Enter the percentage and the number, get the result instantly. Formula: (X ÷ 100) × Y. Used for tips, discounts, tax, commission and test scores.
X is what % of Y?
Find what percentage one number is of another. Formula: (X ÷ Y) × 100. Used for grade percentages, market share, proportion calculations and survey results.
Percentage change (increase / decrease)
Calculate how much something has changed relative to the original value. Shows whether it is an increase or decrease with a clear label. Also displays the percentage points difference when both inputs appear to be percentages.
Reverse percentage calculator
Find the original number when you know a percentage of it. Formula: Part ÷ (Percentage ÷ 100). Used for pre-tax or pre-discount prices, finding original marks and working backwards from known results.
Percentage difference (symmetric)
Compare two values relative to their average — neither value is treated as the baseline. Formula: (|A − B| ÷ ((A + B) ÷ 2)) × 100. The tool explains clearly how this differs from percentage change, a distinction competitors rarely make.
Step-by-step formula for every mode
Every result shows a numbered step-by-step breakdown of how the answer was reached — not just the final number. See the formula with your actual values substituted in, so you can understand and reproduce the calculation yourself.
📖 How to use

How to use this percentage calculator

Choose your calculation type
Select one of the five tabs at the top of the tool: X% of Y for finding a percentage of a number, X is what % for finding what percentage one number is of another, % Change for increases and decreases, Reverse % for finding the original number, or % Difference for comparing two values symmetrically.
Enter your numbers
Type your values into the input fields. Decimal numbers are supported. Results update in real time — there is no Calculate button to press. The result appears as soon as both fields have valid numbers entered.
Read the result and the formula
The result card shows the answer in large text. Below it, the step-by-step formula card shows exactly how the answer was calculated — with your actual numbers substituted into each step of the formula.
Check the contextual explanation
For the percentage change mode, if both your inputs look like percentages (values between 0 and 100), the tool also shows the percentage points difference — because an increase from 3% to 5% is 2 percentage points, but a 66.7% relative change.
Switch modes without losing context
Click any tab to switch modes. Each mode has independent inputs, so switching does not clear your numbers. You can use multiple modes in the same session to approach the same problem from different angles.
Understand percentage difference vs change
On the Percentage Difference tab, a callout explains the key conceptual difference between percentage change and percentage difference — a distinction that most free calculators fail to explain and that frequently causes errors in reporting and analysis.
🏆 Why LazyTools

How this calculator compares to competitors

Feature LazyTools ✦ Calculator.net CalculatorSoup Omni Calculator
What is X% of Y?
X is what % of Y?
Percentage change
Reverse percentageSeparate pageSeparate page
Percentage difference (symmetric)Separate page
All 5 modes in one unified tool✔ YesSeparate pagesSeparate pagesSeparate pages
Step-by-step formula shown inline✔ Every modeText only✔ Some✔ Some
Real-time results (no button needed)✔ YesButton requiredButton required✔ Yes
% change vs % difference explanation✔ Inline calloutNoneNoneArticle only
Percentage points note when relevant✔ Auto-detectedNoneNoneNone
📊 Quick reference

Percentage formulas — quick reference

Calculation Formula Example Result
What is X% of Y?(X ÷ 100) × YWhat is 20% of 150?30
X is what % of Y?(X ÷ Y) × 10030 is what % of 150?20%
Percentage increase((New − Old) ÷ Old) × 10080 to 100+25%
Percentage decrease((Old − New) ÷ Old) × 100100 to 80−20%
Reverse percentagePart ÷ (Percentage ÷ 100)30 is 20% of what?150
Percentage difference(|A − B| ÷ ((A+B)÷2)) × 10080 vs 10022.22%
Add X% to YY × (1 + X÷100)Add 10% to 200220
Remove X% from YY × (1 − X÷100)Remove 25% from 8060
Percentage pointsNew% − Old% (arithmetic)3% to 5%2 pp
% change between percentages((New% − Old%) ÷ Old%) × 1003% to 5%+66.7%
📖 Complete guide

How to Calculate Percentages — All Five Methods Explained with Formulas and Real-World Examples

Percentages are one of the most universally used forms of mathematical expression, appearing in everything from tax calculations to scientific measurements, from sales commission to exam grading. Despite their ubiquity, percentage calculations are frequently misapplied — particularly the distinction between percentage change and percentage difference, or the confusion between percentage change and percentage points. Understanding each calculation type, when to use it and what formula to apply is essential for accurate financial analysis, academic work and everyday decision-making.

Mode 1 — What is X% of Y? (finding a percentage of a number)

This is the most common percentage calculation in everyday life. The formula is: Result = (X ÷ 100) × Y. To find 20% of 150: (20 ÷ 100) × 150 = 0.20 × 150 = 30. Common uses include calculating a tip on a restaurant bill (15% of £45 = £6.75), calculating VAT or sales tax (20% of £200 = £40), computing a sales commission (8% of $12,000 = $960), finding a percentage of a test's marks (75% of 80 marks = 60 marks needed), or working out a discount (30% off £120 = £36 saving, pay £84).

Mode 2 — X is what percentage of Y? (expressing one number as a percentage of another)

This mode answers the question "what fraction of Y is X, expressed as a percentage?" The formula is: Percentage = (X ÷ Y) × 100. If 42 out of 60 students passed an exam, the pass rate is (42 ÷ 60) × 100 = 70%. Common applications include calculating exam scores, expressing market share (a company with £4M revenue in a £20M market has a 20% share), measuring survey response rates, calculating what percentage of a budget has been spent, and expressing nutritional values as a percentage of daily recommended intake.

Mode 3 — Percentage change (increase and decrease)

Percentage change measures how much a value has changed relative to its original value. The formula is: % Change = ((New − Old) ÷ |Old|) × 100. A positive result is a percentage increase; a negative result is a percentage decrease. If a salary increases from £35,000 to £38,500: ((38,500 − 35,000) ÷ 35,000) × 100 = (3,500 ÷ 35,000) × 100 = 10% increase. If a stock falls from $120 to $96: ((96 − 120) ÷ 120) × 100 = (−24 ÷ 120) × 100 = −20% (a 20% decrease). The formula uses the absolute value of the original in the denominator to handle cases where the original is negative — for example, a loss that grows from −$10,000 to −$15,000 represents a 50% increase in losses.

A critical asymmetry to understand: a 50% increase followed by a 50% decrease does not return to the original value. Starting at 100, a 50% increase gives 150, and a 50% decrease from 150 gives 75 — not 100. This asymmetry occurs because the percentage is applied to a different base each time.

Mode 4 — Reverse percentage (finding the original number)

Reverse percentage finds the original whole when you know what a percentage of it equals. The formula is: Original = Part ÷ (Percentage ÷ 100). If 30 is 20% of some unknown number: 30 ÷ (20 ÷ 100) = 30 ÷ 0.20 = 150. This calculation is used to find a pre-VAT price when you know the VAT-inclusive price (divide the inclusive price by 1.20 for 20% VAT), to find a pre-discount price when you know the sale price (if the sale price is £84 after a 30% discount, the original was £84 ÷ 0.70 = £120), and to find total marks when you know a percentage score (if 72% equals 54 marks, total marks = 54 ÷ 0.72 = 75).

Mode 5 — Percentage difference (symmetric comparison)

Percentage difference compares two values relative to their average, treating neither value as the baseline. The formula is: % Difference = (|A − B| ÷ ((A + B) ÷ 2)) × 100. Comparing 80 and 100: |80 − 100| = 20, average = (80 + 100) ÷ 2 = 90, percentage difference = (20 ÷ 90) × 100 = 22.2%. The same result is obtained regardless of which value is A and which is B — this is the symmetric property. Percentage difference is appropriate when comparing two independent measurements, prices or quantities where neither is clearly the "original" or "baseline". It is commonly used in laboratory science (to compare a measured value against a reference value), economics (comparing prices across regions), and quality control.

Percentage change vs percentage difference — the most misunderstood distinction

Confusing percentage change with percentage difference is one of the most common errors in quantitative reporting. Percentage change is directional: it matters which value is old and which is new, and the result is relative to the old value. Comparing 80 (old) to 100 (new) gives a 25% increase; comparing 100 (old) to 80 (new) gives a −20% decrease. Percentage difference is symmetric: 80 vs 100 and 100 vs 80 both give the same 22.2% difference, because the average (90) is the denominator. Use percentage change when tracking something over time where one value precedes the other. Use percentage difference when comparing two contemporary measurements or values with no inherent time direction.

Percentage points versus percentage change

When the values being compared are themselves percentages, an additional distinction becomes critical. If a central bank raises interest rates from 3% to 5%, the change can be described in two valid but very different ways: it is a 2 percentage point (pp) increase (arithmetic difference), and it is also a 66.7% relative change (percentage change formula). Both are correct — they measure different things. The percentage points figure is the simple subtraction of one percentage from another. The relative percentage change shows how much the original percentage grew, using the original as the base. Financial news and economic commentary routinely confuse the two, causing significant misinterpretation. This calculator automatically shows both figures when the inputs appear to be percentages.

Common percentage calculation mistakes and how to avoid them

Several recurring errors trip up percentage calculations even for experienced users. Applying a percentage to the wrong base is the most frequent — always be clear which value is the "whole" before dividing. Compounding percentages incorrectly is another: a 10% increase followed by a 10% discount does not return to the original price, because each percentage applies to a different base. Mixing up percentage change and percentage points when discussing changes between percentages leads to misreporting; always specify which you mean. Using percentage difference (symmetric) when you actually want percentage change (directional) produces a result that seems close but is mathematically incorrect for time-series comparisons. And dividing by zero — attempting to find a percentage change from zero — produces an undefined result, because any value is infinitely large relative to zero.

Frequently asked questions

The basic formula is Percentage = (Part ÷ Whole) × 100. To find X% of Y: (X ÷ 100) × Y. To find what percentage X is of Y: (X ÷ Y) × 100. For example, 20% of 150 = (20 ÷ 100) × 150 = 30. And 30 as a percentage of 150 = (30 ÷ 150) × 100 = 20%.
Percentage change is directional and uses the original value as the base: ((New − Old) ÷ |Old|) × 100. Percentage difference is symmetric and uses the average of both values as the base: (|A − B| ÷ ((A+B)÷2)) × 100. Comparing 80 and 100: percentage change is 25% (from 80 to 100) or −20% (from 100 to 80), while percentage difference is always 22.2% regardless of order.
Divide the known part by the percentage converted to a decimal: Original = Part ÷ (Percentage ÷ 100). If £84 is the price after a 30% discount, the original price was £84 ÷ 0.70 = £120. If a price including 20% VAT is £120, the pre-VAT price was £120 ÷ 1.20 = £100.
A percentage point (pp) is the arithmetic difference between two percentages. If interest rates rise from 3% to 5%, that is 2 percentage points — but a 66.7% relative increase. Percentage points measure absolute change between percentages; percentage change measures relative change. Always specify which you mean when discussing changes between two percentage values to avoid ambiguity.
Because each percentage is applied to a different base. Starting at 100: a 50% increase gives 150. A 50% decrease from 150 gives 75, not 100. The first percentage used 100 as its base, the second used 150. To reverse a 50% increase exactly, you need a 33.3% decrease (not 50%), because you must divide by the higher number. This is why "buy one get one 50% off" and "50% extra free" have different real values.
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