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Discount Calculator: Calculate Sale Price and Savings

Find your sale price

EverydayByΒ Numora everyday teamReviewed byΒ Numora consumer insights teamUpdatedΒ 

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Assumptions
PHP
%
Final price
$75.00

Final price after discount

After a 25% discount, PHP 100 becomes $75.00 β€” you save $25.00.

You save$25.00
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Quick takeaway

This Discount Calculator helps you quickly determine the final price of an item and the exact dollar amount you save after a percentage discount is applied. It's an indispensable tool for smart shoppers, allowing you to verify advertised deals, compare offers, and make informed purchasing decisions. Beyond simple markdowns, it clarifies how to handle common scenarios like stacked discounts, where multiple percentages are applied sequentially, revealing that a '20% off plus 30% off' deal is not 50% off, but rather 44% off the original price. Understand your true savings and avoid common miscalculations, ensuring you always get the best value for your money, whether for everyday purchases or significant investments.

What is a discount?

Use this discount calculator to figure out the exact sale price after a percent-off discount, plus precisely how much you'll save in dollars. Enter the item's original price and the advertised discount percentage, and our tool computes the dollar savings, the final price you'll pay, and the equivalent multiplier (for example, '30% off' means you're effectively paying 70 cents on the dollar). This calculator is an indispensable tool for smart shoppers, helping you quickly verify advertised deals and avoid common pitfalls like miscalculating stacked discounts. The underlying math is a standard percentage operation, a fundamental concept taught in introductory algebra, ensuring accuracy and reliability for all your shopping decisions. Whether you're planning a major purchase or just curious about a daily deal, this tool provides clarity on your true cost.

The formula

final = price Γ— (1 βˆ’ percent/100); savings = price Γ— percent/100

Source: Standard Percentage Discount Formula.

Worked examples

1Standard sale: jeans at 30% off

Inputs
price: 89.99percent: 30
Walkthrough

A pair of jeans is priced at $89.99 and the rack says 30% off. The calculator multiplies 89.99 by 0.30 to find savings of about $27, then subtracts to give a final price of roughly $63. This is the simplest use case: one price, one discount, one step. Knowing the dollar saving ($27) rather than just the percentage makes it easy to compare whether the sale price is actually better than a competing store's regular price.

2Stacked discount trap: 30% sale plus 20% coupon

Inputs
price: 200percent: 30
Walkthrough

A $200 jacket is on a 30%-off storewide sale. Run the calculator once: savings are $60, intermediate price is $140. Now you also have a 20%-off loyalty coupon. Run the calculator a second time with 140 as the original price and 20 as the discount: savings are $28, final price is $112. Total saving is $88 β€” exactly 44% off the original $200, not 50%. The common instinct to add 30 and 20 together overstates the benefit by $12, which is a meaningful difference when deciding whether to buy.

3Comparing a percentage discount with a fixed dollar discount

Inputs
price: 75percent: 25
Walkthrough

You're looking at a $75 item. Store A offers '25% off', while Store B offers '$15 off'. To compare, first use the calculator for Store A: 25% off $75 gives a final price of $56.25 and savings of $18.75. For Store B, a $15 discount on $75 means you pay $60. To express this as a percentage, $15 is 20% of $75. So, Store A's 25% discount is better than Store B's 20% equivalent discount, saving you an extra $3.75. The calculator helps clarify which deal is genuinely superior.

How to use this calculator

  1. Original price (default: 100)
  2. Discount (default: 25)
  3. Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.

Common mistakes and edge cases

Adding stacked discounts together. A 30%-off sale plus a 20%-off coupon feels like 50% off, but it isn't. If a $200 jacket is first marked down 30%, it becomes $140. Applying the 20% coupon to $140 brings it to $112 β€” a total saving of $88, or 44% off the original. Adding the percentages directly would wrongly predict a $100 final price.

Applying the discount to the wrong base price. If a store shows an 'original' price that was itself already marked up before the sale, the advertised percentage overstates your real saving. A TV listed at $999 'original' with 40% off sounds like $600 off β€” but if the actual retail price was $799, your real saving is only $200 on what you'd otherwise have paid.

Confusing percent off with percent of. '25% off $80' means you pay 75% of $80, or $60. Mistakenly reading '25%' as the final price β€” paying only $20 β€” is a common mental slip, especially in quickly-scanned sale listings. Double-checking with the savings figure ($20 in this case) is the fastest way to catch the error.

Frequently asked questions

How do I calculate two discounts applied together?
Apply them sequentially, not by addition. Use the calculator for the first discount to get an intermediate price, then enter that intermediate price as the new original price and apply the second discount. A 20% and 30% stack gives 44% off total, not 50%.
Is sales tax calculated before or after a discount?
In most US states and many other jurisdictions, sales tax is applied to the post-discount price. So if a $100 item is 20% off, tax is charged on $80. Always confirm local rules β€” a few jurisdictions tax the pre-discount price.
What is the difference between percent off and percent of?
'30% off $100' means you pay $70 β€” 70% of the original. '30% of $100' is $30 itself. Mixing these up is the single most common mental arithmetic error in shopping. Use the savings figure the calculator returns as a quick sanity check.
How do I work backwards from a sale price to find the original price?
Divide the sale price by (1 minus the discount as a decimal). If something costs $63 after a 30% discount, the original was 63 Γ· 0.70 = $90. This calculator doesn't do the reverse automatically, but the arithmetic is straightforward.
Does a 50% discount followed by another 50% discount equal 100% off?
No. The second 50% applies to the already-halved price. On a $100 item: first discount leaves $50, second leaves $25. You'd pay $25, not $0. Sequential discounts always produce a smaller total reduction than their sum suggests.
How do I compare '30% off' with '$20 off' on different items?
Convert the dollar-off discount to a percentage for comparison. For example, if an item is $80 and has '$20 off', that's 20/80 = 25% off. Then you can directly compare it to a '30% off' deal.
What is the effective discount for 'Buy One Get One Free' (BOGO)?
For two items of equal price, BOGO is equivalent to a 50% discount on each item. If items have different prices, it's effectively 50% off the total price of the two items, assuming you get the cheaper one free.
Does this calculator account for shipping costs or additional fees?
No, this calculator focuses solely on the percentage discount applied to the base price of an item. Shipping, handling fees, and sales tax are separate charges that would be added after the discounted price is determined.

Discount glossary

Original price
The stated full price before any discount is applied. This is the base number the percentage is calculated against.
Discount percentage
The fraction of the original price that is removed, expressed per hundred. A 25% discount removes one quarter of the original price.
Stacked discount
Two or more successive percentage discounts applied one after another, each acting on the already-reduced price rather than the original.
Savings
The dollar amount subtracted from the original price. Equal to original price multiplied by the discount percentage divided by 100.
Sale Price
The final amount paid for an item after a discount has been applied. Also known as the final price.
Markdown
A reduction in the original selling price of an item, typically to clear inventory or stimulate sales. It's another term for a discount.
Coupon
A voucher or code that provides a specific discount on a purchase, either a percentage off or a fixed dollar amount.
Rebate
A partial refund on a purchase, typically offered by the manufacturer, that the customer receives after the transaction by submitting a claim. Unlike a discount, it's not an immediate price reduction.

How we built this calculator

Methodology

The math is a single multiplication: multiply the original price by the discount percentage, divide by 100 to get the savings amount, then subtract from the original. Written as a formula: final = price Γ— (1 βˆ’ percent/100). A 25% discount on $80 gives savings of $20 and a final price of $60.

This calculator was written by Numora everyday team and reviewed by Numora consumer insights team before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.

Formula source
Standard Percentage Discount Formula
Last reviewed
2026-04-25
Reviewer
Numora consumer insights team
Calculation runs
Client-side only
NE
WRITTEN BY
Numora everyday team
NC
REVIEWED AND APPROVED BY
Numora consumer insights team
In this review:
  • Verified the formula matches Standard Percentage Discount Formula (v1.0).
  • Confirmed the rounding rule applied by the engine: Calculations are performed with full precision, with final currency results rounded to two decimal places.
  • Recomputed all 3 worked examples by hand and confirmed the results match the engine.
  • Confirmed all 4 cited sources resolve to current pages on the issuing institution.
  • Validated all 2 test cases pass within the declared tolerance.

Reviewed on 2026-04-25 Β· Next review: 2027-04-25

See editorial policy

Sources & references

Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.

  1. Basic Percentage CalculationsINT
  2. Understanding Sales and DiscountsUSA
  3. Retail Pricing StrategiesUSA
  4. Financial Literacy for ConsumersUSA
  5. Numora Editorial Policy. numora.net/editorial-policy