Discount Percentage Calculator
Find out what percentage discount was applied by entering the original and final prices.
Know the discount but need the final price?
Discount calculatorWant to apply more than one discount to the same amount?
Multiple discount calculatorWhat Is a Discount Percentage Calculator?
How to Calculate Discount Percentage From Two Prices
Discount Percentage Formula
- = Discount percentage
- = Original price (before discount)
- = Final price (after discount, also called sale price)
Discount Percentage Examples
Finding the Percent Off on a TV During a Holiday Sale
Comparing Two Competing Shoe Sales
Verifying an Advertised Discount on Groceries
Tips for Evaluating Discounts Like a Pro
- Always calculate the actual percentage yourself when a store shows "was/now" pricing without stating the discount rate. Retailers sometimes round up or exaggerate the percent off in their marketing.
- Compare discounts as percentages, not just dollar amounts. Saving $20 on a $40 item (50% off) is a much better deal than saving $20 on a $200 item (10% off), relative to the price.
- Watch for inflated original prices. Some retailers raise the "original" price before a sale to make the discount appear larger. Check price history on comparison sites before assuming a deal is genuine.
- Use the 10% mental shortcut to estimate quickly: find 10% by moving the decimal one place left, then scale. If a $79 item is now $63, the savings are $16. 10% of $79 is $7.90, so $16 is roughly 20% off.
- When deciding between two deals at different stores, calculate both the percentage off and the absolute savings. A higher percentage on a cheaper item may still mean less money saved than a lower percentage on a pricier one.
- For online shopping, pair this calculator with browser extensions that track historical pricing. A "40% off" sale means little if the item was already at the sale price for months.
Frequently Asked Questions About Discount Percentage
How do I find what percentage off something is?
Subtract the sale price from the original price, divide the result by the original price, and multiply by 100. For example, an item that dropped from $60 to $45: ($60 minus $45) divided by $60 times 100 equals 25% off. You saved $15, which is one quarter of the original price.
What percentage off is $30 from $50?
The discount is 40% off. Calculation: ($50 minus $30) divided by $50 times 100 equals $20 divided by $50 times 100, which is 40%. You save $20 on a $50 item.
Is a 20% discount considered a good deal?
It depends on the product category and timing. For electronics, 20% off is a solid discount since margins are typically thin. For clothing, 20% is common during regular sales but modest compared to end-of-season clearances (40-70% off). For groceries, 20% off is above average. As a general benchmark, discounts below 15% are minor, 20-30% is meaningful, and above 40% is a strong deal.
Why does dividing by the original price matter and not the sale price?
The discount percentage is always relative to the starting point, which is the original price. Dividing by the sale price would give you the markup percentage needed to go from the sale price back to the original, which is a different and larger number. For example, a drop from $100 to $75 is a 25% discount, but going from $75 back to $100 requires a 33.3% increase.
How do I calculate the discount percentage in Excel or Google Sheets?
Use the formula =(A1-B1)/A1 where A1 contains the original price and B1 contains the sale price. Format the cell as a percentage. For example, if A1 is 120 and B1 is 78, the formula returns 0.35, which displays as 35% when formatted as a percentage.
What is the difference between discount percentage and markup percentage?
Discount percentage measures how much a price decreased relative to the original price. Markup percentage measures how much a price increased relative to the cost. They use different bases: discount divides by the higher price, markup divides by the lower price. A product bought at $60 and sold at $100 has a 40% discount if reduced from $100 to $60, but a 66.7% markup going from the $60 cost to the $100 selling price.
Can I use this calculator to compare prices from different time periods?
Yes. Enter the older (higher) price as the original price and the current price as the final price. The calculator will show you the percentage decrease. This works for tracking price drops on products you have been watching, comparing last year's price to this year's, or evaluating whether a "price match" offer is worthwhile.
How do stacked discounts affect the total discount percentage?
When two discounts are applied sequentially (such as 20% off plus an additional 10% off), they do not simply add up to 30%. The second discount applies to the already-reduced price. A 20% discount followed by a 10% discount on a $100 item gives you $72, not $70 -- an effective total discount of 28%, not 30%. Use our multiple discounts calculator to find the exact combined percentage.
Key Terms
Discount Percentage
The proportion by which a price has been reduced, expressed as a percentage of the original price. A drop from $100 to $75 represents a 25% discount.
Original Price
The full retail or list price before any discount. Also called the regular price, sticker price, or MSRP.
Sale Price
The reduced price a buyer pays after the discount has been applied. Also called the final price or discounted price.
Savings
The dollar amount kept in your pocket thanks to the discount. Calculated as original price minus sale price.
Markup
The opposite of a discount. The amount added to a cost price to arrive at a selling price, usually expressed as a percentage of the cost.
Stacked Discount
Two or more discounts applied sequentially to the same item. Each discount is calculated on the already-reduced price, not the original.
Price Anchoring
A retail strategy where a high original price is displayed alongside the sale price to make the discount appear more attractive, even if the item was rarely sold at the anchor price.
