Percent Off Calculator
Calculate the sale price after a percentage discount. Find out how much you save and the final price you pay. See also Percentage Calculator and Percentage Decrease Calculator.
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How to Calculate Percent Off
Calculating a percentage discount is straightforward: multiply the original price by the discount percentage (as a decimal), then subtract that amount from the original price. This calculator handles single discounts, stacked (sequential) discounts, and can even reverse-calculate the discount percentage when you know the original and sale prices.
Discount Formulas
Discount Amount = Original Price x (Discount% / 100)
Final Price = Original Price - Discount Amount
Final Price = Original Price x (1 - Discount% / 100)
For stacked discounts:
Final Price = Original x (1 - D1/100) x (1 - D2/100) x ...
Reverse calculation:
Percent Off = ((Original - Paid) / Original) x 100
Example
Original Price = $120, Discount = 25%
Discount Amount = $120 x (25/100) = $30
Final Price = $120 - $30 = $90
Understanding Stacking Discounts
When multiple discounts are applied sequentially, they do NOT simply add up. A 20% discount followed by a 10% discount is NOT the same as a 30% discount. Each subsequent discount is applied to the already-reduced price, resulting in a smaller total discount than you might expect.
$200 with 20% off then 10% off:
Step 1: $200 x 0.80 = $160
Step 2: $160 x 0.90 = $144
Total saved: $56 (effective 28% off, NOT 30%)
The Psychology of Sales
Retailers use percentage discounts strategically. Research shows that consumers perceive "25% off" differently than "save $25" even when the dollar amount is identical. For items under $100, percentage discounts tend to feel larger. For items over $100, dollar-amount discounts feel more significant. Understanding this helps you evaluate whether a sale is genuinely a good deal.
Common Discounts on a $100 Item
| Discount | You Save | You Pay | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5% | $5.00 | $95.00 | Loyalty/newsletter signup |
| 10% | $10.00 | $90.00 | First-time buyer discount |
| 15% | $15.00 | $85.00 | Seasonal promotion |
| 20% | $20.00 | $80.00 | Standard sale event |
| 25% | $25.00 | $75.00 | Major sale event |
| 30% | $30.00 | $70.00 | End-of-season clearance |
| 40% | $40.00 | $60.00 | Deep discount sale |
| 50% | $50.00 | $50.00 | Half-price sale |
| 60% | $60.00 | $40.00 | Clearance rack |
| 75% | $75.00 | $25.00 | Final clearance |
How to Calculate Discounts Step by Step
- Start with the original (pre-sale) price of the item.
- Convert the discount percentage to a decimal by dividing by 100 (e.g., 25% becomes 0.25).
- Multiply the original price by the decimal to find the discount amount.
- Subtract the discount amount from the original price to get the final price.
- For multiple discounts, repeat steps 2-4 using the new price each time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 20% off plus 10% off the same as 30% off?
No. Stacked discounts are applied sequentially, not added together. 20% off then 10% off equals an effective 28% discount. The second discount applies to the already-reduced price, so you save less than you would with a single 30% discount.
Does the order of stacked discounts matter?
Mathematically, no. 20% off then 10% off gives the same final price as 10% off then 20% off. Multiplication is commutative: 0.80 x 0.90 = 0.90 x 0.80. However, the intermediate prices differ.
How do I calculate the original price from a sale price?
Divide the sale price by (1 - discount/100). For example, if you paid $75 after a 25% discount: $75 / (1 - 0.25) = $75 / 0.75 = $100 original price.
What does "up to X% off" mean?
It means the maximum discount available is X%, but most items may have smaller discounts. Retailers use this phrasing to advertise the best possible deal, even if only a few items qualify for the maximum discount.
Is it better to get a percentage off or a fixed dollar amount off?
It depends on the price. For expensive items, a percentage discount usually saves more. For cheap items, a fixed dollar amount may be better. Compare the actual savings: 20% off a $500 item saves $100, while $15 off saves only $15.
How do I calculate discount with tax?
Apply the discount first, then calculate tax on the discounted price. For example: $100 item with 25% off = $75, then 8% tax on $75 = $6, so total = $81. Tax is calculated on the sale price, not the original price.
What is the difference between percent off and percent decrease?
They are mathematically identical. "25% off" and "25% decrease" both mean the final value is 75% of the original. The term "percent off" is used in retail/shopping contexts, while "percent decrease" is used in math and science.