General Utility

Percentage Calculator

Calculate any percentage problem: what is X% of Y, what percent is X of Y, or percent change from X to Y.

What is X% of Y?
X is what % of Y?
% change from X to Y

All three panels update automatically as you type.

About this calculator

Percentages are the most common math people do in daily life and the most common source of mental calculation errors. Tip on a restaurant bill, a 30% off sale, whether a raise was bigger than inflation — all percentages. Having a tool that handles all three directions of the calculation (X% of Y, X as a percent of Y, and percent change) without switching modes covers nearly every practical case.

Quick mental math tricks: To find 15% of a number, find 10% (move decimal left one place) then add half of that. For 20%, just find 10% and double it. For percentage change: subtract, divide by original, multiply by 100.

The three percentage problems

Nearly every percentage question fits one of three forms. What is 15% of 240? Multiply: 240 x 0.15 = 36. 36 is what percent of 240? Divide and multiply: (36/240) x 100 = 15%. What is the percent change from 200 to 240? ((240-200)/200) x 100 = 20% increase. Understanding which form you are solving before calculating prevents the most common errors.

Percentage vs percentage point

If interest rates rise from 4% to 5%, they increased by 1 percentage point, but by 25% as a relative change. If a candidate's poll support rises from 40% to 50%, that is a 10 percentage point increase but a 25% relative increase. The distinction matters in financial and political contexts where "percent increase" is often confused with "percentage point increase."

Frequently asked questions

How do I calculate a tip quickly?

For 20% tip: move the decimal left one place to get 10%, then double it. On a $47 bill: 10% = $4.70, doubled = $9.40. For 15%: find 10% ($4.70) and add half of that ($2.35) = $7.05. The Tip & Bill Split calculator handles this with more options including splitting among multiple people.

How do I work backward from a sale price?

If an item is marked down 30% and costs $84, the original price is $84 / (1 - 0.30) = $84 / 0.70 = $120. A common mistake is adding the discount percent to the sale price, which gives the wrong answer. Always divide by (1 - discount rate) to find the original price.

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