Free Calculator

Discount Calculator

Enter a price and a discount to instantly see the final price and exactly how much you save.

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Discount Calculator: See the Real Sale Price in Seconds

Sales are designed to make you bad at math. "40% off!" sounds great until you're standing in the store trying to subtract percentages in your head, and somehow the number you land on is never quite right. Then you get to the till and the price isn't what you thought. A discount calculator fixes that in about two seconds — you type the price and the percentage off, and it tells you exactly what you'll pay and exactly what you'll save.

That's the whole job of the free Discount Calculator above. No mental gymnastics, no rounding errors, no surprises at checkout.

What it does

You enter the original price and the discount, and it instantly shows you three things: the final price, how much you save in actual money, and the original price for reference. That's it. As a price discount calculator it cuts straight to the answer you actually care about — what's this going to cost me?

So whether you think of it as a percent off calculator, a discount off calculator, or a discount price calculator, it's all the same simple idea: turn a confusing percentage into a real number you can trust.

The math, if you're curious

Here's the discount calculation formula it runs: Final price = original price × (1 − discount ÷ 100). To find the saving on its own, multiply the price by the discount percentage and divide by 100. So a 25% discount on $120 saves you $30, which means you pay $90.

You don't have to do any of that yourself — the tool handles it — but it's worth knowing it's the standard discount calculator percentage math, not some made-up formula. If you ever want to go the other way and work out what percentage one number is of another, our Percentage Calculator handles that side of things. Punch in $120 at 25% off and you'll see $90 final price, $30 saved, instantly.

It works for any discount, any currency

This is where it gets handy day to day. Shopping a "10% off" banner? Use it as a 10 discount calculator. Got a 15%-off coupon? It's a 15 discount calculator. Black Friday hitting you with 20% off everything? Same tool, run it as a 20 discount calculator. The percentage doesn't matter — it just works with whatever number you type.

And because it only deals in numbers, it doesn't care about currency. Dollars, euros, rupees, pounds — type the figure, get the result. One calculator for every sale, anywhere.

A couple of honest notes

Two searches come up a lot, so let me be straight about them. If you want a discount calculator with tax — one that adds sales tax on top of the discounted price — that's a slightly different calculation, and this tool focuses purely on the discount itself (price, saving, final price). Same with a double discount calculator for stacking two offers, like "20% off, then an extra 10%." This one handles a single clean discount really well; for stacked deals you'd just run it twice, applying the second percentage to the first result.

I'd rather tell you that than have you expect a feature that isn't there. For the thing most people actually need — "what's the sale price?" — it's spot on every time.

A quick example

Say a jacket is marked at $120 with 25% off. Type those two numbers in and you immediately see: final price $90, you save $30. Now imagine you're comparing it to another store offering 30% off a $135 jacket. Run both in a few seconds and you've got a clear, side-by-side answer instead of a gut feeling. That's the real value — not just doing the math, but doing it fast enough to actually compare your options while you're still deciding.

Handy for sellers too

It's not only for shoppers. If you run a store or sell online, the same tool helps you sanity-check a sale before you advertise it — see exactly what a markdown does to your price. From there, our Profit Margin Calculator shows what that discounted price leaves you in profit, and if you're pricing bigger purchases or financing, the EMI / Loan Calculator breaks down monthly payments. Together they cover most of the "what does this actually cost?" questions.

Free, private, no sign-up

The calculator runs entirely in your browser. Nothing you type is uploaded anywhere, there's no account to make, and it costs nothing. If you want to keep a result, you can email it to yourself, but that's totally optional. Quick, private, done.

Try it next time you shop

Next time a sale tag has you second-guessing the math, skip the guesswork. Use the Discount Calculator above, type the price and the percentage, and see the real number before you buy. It's the difference between hoping you got a good deal and actually knowing you did.

Questions answered

Frequently asked questions

Everything you might be wondering about the Discount Calculator.

How do I calculate a discount?
Multiply the original price by the discount percentage and divide by 100 to get the saving, then subtract it from the price. A 25% discount on $120 saves $30, so the final price is $90.
How do I find the final price after a percentage off?
Final price = original price × (1 − discount/100). Enter the price and discount above and the final price, your saving, and the original price all appear instantly.
Can I use it for any currency?
Yes — it just works with numbers, so it applies to any currency. It runs free in your browser with nothing uploaded.
How do you calculate a discount with tax?
This tool focuses on the discount itself — price, saving, and final price. To add sales tax, take the final (discounted) price it gives you and multiply by (1 + tax rate ÷ 100). For example, $90 after the discount with 8% tax is $90 × 1.08 = $97.20.
How do you calculate two stacked (double) discounts?
Apply them one after another, not by adding the percentages. "20% off, then an extra 10%" on $100 is $100 → $80 → $72 (not 30% off / $70). Just run the calculator twice — enter the result of the first discount as the price for the second.
What is the discount calculation formula?
Saving = original price × discount% ÷ 100, and final price = original price × (1 − discount ÷ 100). So 25% off $120 is a $30 saving and a $90 final price — which is exactly what the calculator shows.
See it in action

A worked example

Real input, real output — so you know what to expect before you run it yourself.

Quick example
Sample input
$120 at 25% off
Sample output
Final price $90 · you save $30.