Percentage Decrease Calculator
Calculate the result of decreasing a value by a given percentage. Find the new value, decrease amount, and remaining fraction. See also Percentage Increase Calculator and Percentage Calculator.
What Is Percentage Decrease?
A percentage decrease calculates how much a value is reduced when decreased by a given percentage. It is used in depreciation calculations, discount pricing, weight loss tracking, population decline, and many other scenarios where values diminish over time. The calculation multiplies the original value by the percentage (as a decimal) and subtracts the result from the original.
Percentage Decrease Formula
New Value = Original Value x (1 - Percentage / 100)
Decrease Amount = Original Value x (Percentage / 100)
Fraction Remaining = 1 - Percentage / 100
Reverse (find % decrease):
Percentage Decrease = ((Original - New) / |Original|) x 100
Successive decreases (N periods):
Final Value = Original x (1 - Percentage / 100)^N
Example Calculation
Original Value = 500, Percentage Decrease = 20%
Decrease Amount = 500 x (20/100) = 500 x 0.20 = 100
New Value = 500 - 100 = 400
Result: 400 (fraction remaining: 0.80)
Common Misconception: Symmetry of Increase and Decrease
One of the most common mathematical misconceptions is that a percentage decrease can be "undone" by the same percentage increase. This is false. A 50% decrease followed by a 50% increase does NOT return to the original value — it gives you only 75% of what you started with.
Start: 100
After 50% decrease: 100 x 0.50 = 50
After 50% increase: 50 x 1.50 = 75
Result: 75 (NOT 100)
To return to 100 from 50, you need a 100% increase.
Understanding Depreciation
Depreciation is the successive decrease in value of an asset over time. Cars, electronics, and machinery all lose value each year. The declining balance method applies a fixed percentage decrease each period. For example, a car that depreciates 15% per year will be worth about 44% of its original value after 5 years (not 25% as simple subtraction would suggest).
Common Percentage Decreases Reference Table
| Original | % Decrease | New Value | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | 15% | $25,500 | New car (1st year depreciation) |
| $30,000 | 20% | $24,000 | New car (aggressive depreciation) |
| $1,000 | 10% | $900 | Electronics (annual value loss) |
| 200 lbs | 5% | 190 lbs | Weight loss goal |
| 200 lbs | 10% | 180 lbs | Significant weight loss |
| $500,000 | 10% | $450,000 | Market correction (stocks) |
| $500,000 | 20% | $400,000 | Bear market (stocks) |
| 1,000,000 | 2% | 980,000 | Population decline |
| $100 | 25% | $75 | Sale discount |
| $100 | 50% | $50 | Half-price clearance |
How to Calculate Percentage Decrease Step by Step
- Start with the original value (the value before the decrease).
- Convert the percentage to a decimal by dividing by 100 (e.g., 20% = 0.20).
- Multiply the original value by the decimal to find the decrease amount.
- Subtract the decrease amount from the original value to get the new value.
- Alternatively, multiply the original by (1 - percentage/100) in one step.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a value decrease by more than 100%?
No. A 100% decrease means the value reaches zero. You cannot decrease below zero using percentage decrease (the value would become negative, which is a different concept). The maximum percentage decrease is 100%.
Why does successive percentage decrease never reach zero?
Because each decrease is applied to the remaining value, which gets smaller each time. Mathematically, multiplying by a fraction less than 1 repeatedly approaches zero but never reaches it (asymptotic behavior). In practice, values eventually round to zero.
What is the half-life in terms of percentage decrease?
Half-life is the number of periods needed for a value to decrease to 50% of its original. For a constant percentage decrease of P% per period, the half-life is: ln(0.5) / ln(1 - P/100). For example, at 10% decrease per period, the half-life is about 6.6 periods.
How do I calculate the percentage needed to return to the original after a decrease?
If a value decreased by P%, you need an increase of P/(100-P) x 100 percent to return to the original. For example, after a 20% decrease, you need a 25% increase (20/80 x 100 = 25%). After a 50% decrease, you need a 100% increase.
What is the difference between percentage decrease and percentage points decrease?
If a rate goes from 25% to 20%, that is a 5 percentage point decrease but a 20% percentage decrease (because 5/25 x 100 = 20%). Percentage points measure absolute difference between percentages; percentage decrease measures relative change.
How is depreciation calculated for tax purposes?
There are several methods: straight-line (equal amount each year), declining balance (fixed percentage each year), and sum-of-years-digits. The declining balance method uses successive percentage decreases. Consult a tax professional for specific rules in your jurisdiction.
Is percentage decrease the same as percent off?
Yes, mathematically they are identical. "20% off" and "20% decrease" both result in a final value that is 80% of the original. The terminology differs by context: "percent off" is used in shopping, while "percentage decrease" is used in math, science, and finance.