Percentage Calculator: Calculate Any Percentage
What is X% of Y
Try the calculator
Math runs in your browser. No sign-up.
This is the calculated percentage of the 'Of' number.
15% of 200 = ٣٠.
A percentage calculator handles the three common shapes of percent question: what is X% of Y, what percent is X of Y, and what is the percent change from A to B. Each is one multiplication or division away from the others; the trick is noticing which shape applies to the real-world problem in front of you.
This comprehensive percentage calculator simplifies three core percentage problems: finding 'what is X% of Y', determining 'what percent is X of Y', and calculating 'the percent change from A to B'. It's an indispensable tool for a many applications, from everyday financial tasks like calculating tips, discounts, and sales tax, to more complex scenarios in business, statistics, and academic studies. Whether you need to quickly determine a portion of a whole, understand relative changes over time, or verify a reverse percentage calculation, this calculator provides instant, accurate results. Its intuitive interface and clear formulas make complex percentage calculations accessible to everyone, ensuring precision for personal finance, retail, and data analysis.
What is a percentage?
Use this percentage calculator for the three calculations people actually need: finding a percentage of a number, determining the percent change between two numbers, and calculating what percent one number is of another. Each mode provides the clear formula, step-by-step worked examples, and the precise result — all without any setup or sign-up required. This tool simplifies common mathematical tasks encountered in finance, retail, statistics, and daily life. The underlying math is based on the standard high-school treatment of ratios and proportions, formalized in any introductory algebra textbook, ensuring accuracy and reliability for all your percentage needs. Whether you're calculating discounts, tips, tax, or analyzing data, this calculator offers a quick and dependable solution.
The formula
Source: Standard Percentage Formula.
Worked examples
1Restaurant tip: 18% of a $65 meal
A dinner bill comes to $65 and you want to leave an 18% tip. Entering 18 in Percent and 65 in Of returns 11.70. That is the dollar amount to add to the bill. This is the purest form of the percentage-of question: the whole is known, the rate is known, and you need the part.
2Reverse percentage: what percent is 45 of 180?
Suppose you scored 45 out of 180 on a practice test and want to know the percentage. The reverse calculation is (45 ÷ 180) × 100 = 25. You can verify this with the calculator by setting Percent to 25 and Of to 180 — the result is exactly 45, confirming the relationship. This worked example shows how to use the forward calculator to check a reverse answer you computed by hand.
3Sales Tax Calculation: 7.5% on a $120 purchase
You're buying an item for $120 and the local sales tax is 7.5%. Entering 7.5 in Percent and 120 in Of yields 9.00. This means the sales tax amount is $9.00. Add this to the original price to get the total cost: $120 + $9.00 = $129.00. This is a direct application of finding a percentage of a number.
How to use this calculator
- Percent (default: 15)
- Of (default: 200)
- Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.
Common mistakes and edge cases
Entering the percent as a decimal
If you type 0.15 instead of 15 in the Percent field, the calculator divides again by 100 and returns 0.30 instead of 30. The fix is always to enter the face-value percentage — 15 for 15%, 7.5 for 7.5%.
Using the wrong base for the 'Of' number
Sales tax on a $200 item after a $40 discount is 8% of $160, not 8% of $200. Entering the pre-discount price as the base overstates the tax by $3.20 — small on one transaction, significant across hundreds.
Confusing percentage-of with percentage-change
If a stock goes from 80 to 100, the gain is not 20% of 80 — that would be 16. The correct move is (100 − 80) ÷ 80 × 100 = 25%. Using this calculator with 20 and 80 gives 16, not the correct 25% change figure.
Frequently asked questions
how do I find what percent one number is of another
how do I calculate a percentage discount
what is the difference between percentage and percentage points
can I calculate sales tax with this calculator
how do I find the original price before a percentage was added
How do I calculate a percentage increase?
How do I calculate a percentage decrease?
How do I reverse a percentage discount?
Percentage glossary
How we built this calculator
Methodology
The formula is straightforward: multiply the whole number by the percentage, then divide by 100. So 15% of 200 means (15 ÷ 100) × 200 = 30. Dividing by 100 converts the percentage into a decimal rate (0.15), and multiplying by the whole scales that rate to the actual quantity.
This calculator was written by Numora math team and reviewed by Numora statistics team before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.
Sources & references
Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.
- Khan Academy: Intro to percentagesINT
- Investopedia: PercentageINT
- Basic Mathematics: PercentagesINT
- National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) StandardsUSA
- Numora Editorial Policy. numora.net/editorial-policy