Calculate sale prices, savings, and compare deals instantly. Simple, fast, and accurate.
percentage to calculate your savings.
Apply two successive discounts to get the total savings.
Compare up to 4 products or deals to find the best price.
Know the final price and discount? Calculate the original price.
Calculate savings with tiered bulk pricing.
Set discount thresholds (e.g., 5% off for 10+ items)
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Enter the original price of an item and the discount percentage. The calculator instantly shows the discounted price, the amount you save, and the final price you pay. You can also calculate the discount percentage when you know the original and sale prices.
Use the bulk mode to calculate discounts on multiple items simultaneously — perfect for comparing deals across different stores or planning a shopping budget with multiple purchases.
The reverse calculator lets you determine what original price corresponds to a sale price at a given discount, useful for retailers setting prices or shoppers verifying advertised savings.
Mental math with percentages leads to errors, especially with unusual discount amounts like 17% or 33% off. This calculator removes the guesswork and shows exact savings instantly, helping you make informed purchase decisions.
Whether you are comparing sale prices, planning a budget, calculating wholesale discounts, or setting retail markups, this tool gives you precise numbers in seconds without needing a spreadsheet.
Multiply the original price by the discount percentage divided by 100, then subtract from the original price. For example, 25% off $80: $80 × 0.25 = $20 discount, final price = $60. This calculator does this instantly for any values.
When multiple discounts apply sequentially (e.g., 20% off then an additional 10% off), they do not add up to 30%. The second discount applies to the already-reduced price. $100 with 20% off = $80, then 10% off $80 = $72. The effective discount is 28%, not 30%.
A discount reduces a price from its original value (customer perspective). A markup increases cost to set a selling price (seller perspective). A 50% markup on a $10 cost gives a $15 price, but a 50% discount on $15 gives $7.50 — not back to $10.
Compare the per-unit price across stores, check the price history if available, and calculate the actual savings in dollars rather than being swayed by large percentage numbers. A 70% discount on an inflated original price may still be expensive.