Percent Off Calculator
Use this percent off calculator calculator to understand your numbers quickly and make clearer decisions with confidence.
How to Use the Percent Off Calculator
This percent off calculator covers every discount scenario you'll face — from finding a final sale price, to discovering what percent off you received, to recovering the original retail price from a bargain-bin tag. Three distinct modes, zero guesswork required.

Three calculation modes: Find Sale Price, Find Percent Off, and Find Original Price
Mode 1 — Find Sale Price (Most Common)
You spot a $120 jacket marked 35% off. What is the register price? Enter $120 as the original price and 35 as the percent off, then click Calculate Sale Price. The result is $78 — with a clear breakdown showing the $42 you save and a visual savings bar.
Mode 2 — Find Percent Off
You see a clearance sticker: regular $89.99, now $67.49. Enter both prices and the tool instantly calculates that you're getting exactly 25% off — perfect for verifying whether a "sale" tag is genuine or artificially inflated.
Mode 3 — Find Original Price
You paid $54 in a 40% off sale and need the retail price for a return, insurance claim, or price comparison. Enter $54 and 40% — the original price recovers instantly as $90.00.
The 3 Essential Percent Off Formulas
Understanding the underlying math lets you fact-check any discount mentally in seconds. All three formulas are algebraically related — our calculator derives any one from the other two.
Formula 1: Find the Sale Price
Sale Price = Original Price × (1 − Percent Off ÷ 100)Example: $200 original, 30% off → $200 × (1 − 0.30) = $200 × 0.70 = $140 sale price. Discount amount = $200 − $140 = $60 saved.
Formula 2: Find the Percent Off
Percent Off = (Original Price − Sale Price) ÷ Original Price × 100Example: Original $80, sale $60 → ($80 − $60) ÷ $80 × 100 = 25% off. Discount amount = $80 − $60 = $20.
Formula 3: Find the Original Price
Original Price = Sale Price ÷ (1 − Percent Off ÷ 100)Example: Paid $75 at 25% off → $75 ÷ (1 − 0.25) = $75 ÷ 0.75 = $100 original price.
For business pricing that works from cost up rather than from retail down, pair this with the Markup Calculator or the Discount Calculator which adds advanced features like stacked discounts and tax.

Each mode solves for one unknown — given the other two values.
Real-World Examples You Can Try Right Now
Black Friday TV Deal
A 65-inch TV normally $1,299.99 is on sale for $779.99.
Mode: Find Percent Off
($1,299.99 − $779.99) ÷ $1,299.99 × 100= 40% off → $520 saved
Grocery Coupon
15% off all meats, cart total $68.40.
Mode: Find Sale Price
$68.40 × (1 − 0.15)= $58.14 final price → $10.26 saved
Reconstruct Gift Price
Jacket gift receipt says 30% off, paid $69.30.
Mode: Find Original Price
$69.30 ÷ (1 − 0.30)= $99.00 original retail price
Online Course Flash Sale
Bootcamp normally $499, 70% off coupon applied.
Mode: Find Sale Price
$499 × (1 − 0.70)= $149.70 final → $349.30 saved
For general percentage calculations beyond discounts, the Percentage Calculator handles tip calculations, grade percentages, percentage change, and more.
Quick Mental Math Tricks for Common Discounts
When you are standing in a store without a phone, these shortcuts let you estimate discounts in under 5 seconds:
10% off
Move decimal left once
$85 → $8.50 off → $76.5020% off
10% × 2
$85 → $8.50 × 2 = $17 off → $6825% off
Divide by 4
$80 ÷ 4 = $20 off → $6030% off
10% × 3
$70 → $7 × 3 = $21 off → $4950% off
Divide by 2
$49.99 → $24.99 (round $25)75% off
25% × 3 off; pay 25%
$80 → $20 final priceFor non-round percentages (like 37% or 62%), the percent off calculator above is your most reliable option. Just enter two values and the tool does the rest.
Smart Shopping Tips: Maximizing Value from Discounts
Verify the "Original Price" Is Real
Some retailers inflate the listed original price before applying a discount — known as reference pricing. Use Mode 2 (Find Percent Off) with independent price-history data to confirm the discount is genuine.
Stack Coupons Correctly — Not Additively
A store-wide 20% off plus an item already 15% off is NOT 35% off. The actual math: Sale = Original × (1 − 0.20) × (1 − 0.15) = Original × 0.68 — effectively only 32% off.
Calculate Cost-Per-Unit Before and After
Bulk deals often carry percentage discounts. Compare the discounted per-unit cost vs. the single-item price to confirm the bulk deal is genuinely better.
Use Original Price Recovery for Insurance Claims
If you bought a discounted item and need to report its market value for insurance, Mode 3 (Find Original Price) instantly reconstructs the undiscounted retail value.
Plan Your Sale Budget in Advance
With $500 budget and expected 40% average discount, you can realistically cover items with a combined retail value of $500 ÷ (1 − 0.40) = $833. Plan your wish list accordingly.
💡 The Savvy Shopper Rule
Before any purchase, ask three questions: (1) Would I buy this at full price? (2) Have I compared at least 3 sources? (3) Have I tracked the price for 2+ weeks? If any answer is "no," the discount is the seller's incentive — not yours. Use our percent off calculator to verify savings in seconds and remove the emotional pressure from split-second sale decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is 25% off $80?
$80 × 0.25 = $20 discount. Final price = $80 − $20 = $60. Quick mental math: $80 ÷ 4 = $20 off. Use the quick-select 25% button in the calculator above for instant verification.
How do I find the original price if I know the sale price and percent off?
Formula: Original Price = Sale Price ÷ (1 − Percent Off ÷ 100). Example: paid $75 with 25% off → $75 ÷ 0.75 = $100 original. Use Mode 3 in the calculator to do this instantly.
Can I apply two percentage discounts at once?
Yes, but they are applied successively, not added. A 20% off coupon on an already 15% off item gives: Original × 0.85 × 0.80 = Original × 0.68 — effectively 32% off, not 35%.
Is percent off the same as percent discount?
"Percent off" and "percent discount" are identical concepts — both describe the percentage reduction from the full price. Markup (a business term) and margin are different, as they are calculated from cost rather than selling price.
How do I calculate the discount percentage from two prices?
Percent Off = (Original − Sale) ÷ Original × 100. Example: was $129, now $89 → ($129 − $89) ÷ $129 × 100 ≈ 31% off. Select Mode 2 — "Find Percent Off" to do this calculation automatically.
Related Financial Calculators
Combine the Percent Off Calculator with these tools for complete financial decision-making:
- Discount Calculator →
Advanced discount tool with stacking, tax, and quantity pricing — for power shoppers and business owners.
- Markup Calculator →
Set prices correctly by calculating markup from cost — the business counterpart to consumer discounts.
- Profit Margin Calculator →
Verify your gross, operating, and net margins stay healthy after applying customer discounts.
- Percentage Calculator →
Handle any general percentage math — tips, grade percentages, percentage change, and more.
- Salary to Hourly Calculator →
Convert salary to hourly rate to evaluate whether a discounted product is worth X hours of your work.
- Investment Calculator →
Model how money saved through smarter shopping can compound into wealth over time.