Percentage Calculator: Master Percentages — Formulas, Shortcuts, Real-Life Uses & Practice
Complete guide to percentages — learn all formulas, mental math shortcuts, real-world applications (discounts, taxes, marks, profit/loss), common mistakes, and calculate percentages instantly.
Aditya Singh
Mathematics educator and competitive exam coach. Making math fun and practical for 8+ years.
Percentage Calculator: Everything You Need to Master Percentages
Percentages are everywhere — your exam marks (85%), a shopping discount (40% off!), your phone battery (23%), bank interest (7.5% p.a.), even weather forecasts (60% chance of rain). Despite being this common, percentages confuse millions of people every day.
This guide makes percentages so simple that you'll never need to second-guess yourself again.
What is a Percentage?
Per-cent literally means "per hundred." When we say 25%, we mean 25 out of every 100.
- 25% = 25/100 = 0.25
- 50% = 50/100 = 0.50 = half
- 100% = 100/100 = 1 = the whole thing
- 150% = 150/100 = 1.5 = more than the whole
Essential Percentage Formulas
1. Find Percentage of a Number
Formula: Result = (Percentage ÷ 100) × Number
Example: What is 18% of ₹15,000?
= (18 ÷ 100) × 15,000 = 0.18 × 15,000 = ₹2,700
2. What Percentage is One Number of Another?
Formula: Percentage = (Part ÷ Whole) × 100
Example: You scored 432 out of 500. What percentage?
= (432 ÷ 500) × 100 = 86.4%
3. Percentage Increase
Formula: % Increase = [(New - Old) ÷ Old] × 100
Example: Salary went from ₹40,000 to ₹48,000
= [(48,000 - 40,000) ÷ 40,000] × 100 = (8,000 ÷ 40,000) × 100 = 20% increase
4. Percentage Decrease
Formula: % Decrease = [(Old - New) ÷ Old] × 100
Example: Price dropped from ₹1,200 to ₹900
= [(1,200 - 900) ÷ 1,200] × 100 = (300 ÷ 1,200) × 100 = 25% decrease
5. Reverse Percentage (Find Original Price)
Formula: Original = Final Price × 100 ÷ (100 + % increase) or (100 - % decrease)
Example: After 20% discount, a shirt costs ₹800. Original price?
= ₹800 × 100 ÷ (100 - 20) = ₹800 × 100 ÷ 80 = ₹1,000
Mental Math Shortcuts for Percentages
These tricks make you faster than a calculator:
The 10% Trick
10% of any number = just move the decimal one place left.
- 10% of 4,500 = 450
- 10% of 83 = 8.3
- 10% of 12,000 = 1,200
Build Other Percentages from 10%
- 5% = Half of 10%. So 5% of 4,500 = 225
- 20% = Double 10%. So 20% of 4,500 = 900
- 15% = 10% + 5%. So 15% of 4,500 = 450 + 225 = 675
- 25% = Divide by 4. So 25% of 4,500 = 1,125
- 1% = Move decimal two places left. 1% of 4,500 = 45
- 30% = 3 × 10%. So 30% of 4,500 = 1,350
The Flip Trick
8% of 50 = 50% of 8 = 4
You can always swap the percentage and the number. Calculate whichever is easier!
- 4% of 75 = 75% of 4 = 3
- 12% of 25 = 25% of 12 = 3
- 6% of 50 = 50% of 6 = 3
Real-Life Percentage Applications
1. Shopping & Discounts
Problem: A ₹2,499 shoe has "Buy 1 Get 50% off on 2nd pair." You buy 2 pairs. What's the effective discount?
- Total MRP = ₹2,499 + ₹2,499 = ₹4,998
- Discount on 2nd pair = 50% of ₹2,499 = ₹1,249.50
- You pay = ₹4,998 - ₹1,249.50 = ₹3,748.50
- Effective discount = (₹1,249.50 ÷ ₹4,998) × 100 = 25% (not 50%!)
2. Exam Marks & GPA
Problem: You need 75% aggregate across 6 subjects (each out of 100). You scored 82, 71, 68, 79, 90. What do you need in the last subject?
- Total needed = 75% of 600 = 450
- Scored so far = 82 + 71 + 68 + 79 + 90 = 390
- Need in last subject = 450 - 390 = 60 marks
3. Profit & Loss in Business
Problem: You buy goods for ₹800 and sell for ₹1,000. Profit percentage?
Profit % = [(1,000 - 800) ÷ 800] × 100 = 25%
⚠️ Common mistake: Many calculate on selling price: (200/1000) × 100 = 20%. This is wrong! Profit % is always on cost price.
4. Tax Calculations
Problem: A restaurant bill is ₹2,000 + 5% GST. Then they add 10% service charge on the pre-tax amount.
- GST = 5% of ₹2,000 = ₹100
- Service charge = 10% of ₹2,000 = ₹200
- Total bill = ₹2,000 + ₹100 + ₹200 = ₹2,300
- Effective extra % = (₹300 ÷ ₹2,000) × 100 = 15%
5. Salary & Increments
Problem: Your CTC is ₹8,00,000. You get a 30% hike. But 40% of CTC is deductions (PF, tax, insurance). What's your new monthly in-hand?
- New CTC = ₹8,00,000 × 1.30 = ₹10,40,000
- In-hand = 60% of CTC = ₹10,40,000 × 0.60 = ₹6,24,000/year
- Monthly in-hand = ₹6,24,000 ÷ 12 = ₹52,000
Tricky Percentage Problems (Competitive Exam Style)
Problem 1: Successive Discounts
A shop offers 20% + 10% discount. Is this the same as 30% discount?
No! On a ₹1,000 item:
- First 20% off: ₹1,000 - ₹200 = ₹800
- Then 10% off on ₹800: ₹800 - ₹80 = ₹720
- Effective discount = (₹280 ÷ ₹1,000) × 100 = 28% (not 30%)
Formula for successive discounts: Effective % = a + b - (a × b ÷ 100)
= 20 + 10 - (20 × 10 ÷ 100) = 30 - 2 = 28% ✓
Problem 2: Percentage Recovery
If a price drops by 20%, by what percentage must it increase to return to original?
Not 20%! If original = ₹100, after 20% decrease = ₹80
To go from ₹80 back to ₹100: Increase = (₹20 ÷ ₹80) × 100 = 25%
Problem 3: Population Growth
A city's population is 5,00,000. It grows 8% annually. Population after 3 years?
= 5,00,000 × (1 + 8/100)³ = 5,00,000 × 1.08³ = 5,00,000 × 1.259712 = 6,29,856
Common Percentage Mistakes
- "30% off + 20% off = 50% off" → Wrong! It's 44% (see successive discounts above)
- Calculating profit on selling price → Always calculate on cost price
- Confusing percentage points vs. percentage change → Interest going from 8% to 10% is a 2 percentage-POINT increase, but a 25% increase
- Ignoring the base number → A 50% increase followed by 50% decrease does NOT bring you back to the original (it's 75% of original)
Use Our Percentage Calculator
Don't struggle with math — use our Percentage Calculator:
- ✅ Calculate any percentage instantly
- ✅ Find percentage increase/decrease
- ✅ Reverse percentage calculations
- ✅ Multiple calculation modes in one tool
- ✅ Perfect for school, business, and daily life
Conclusion
Percentages are the language of everyday math. From understanding your payslip to negotiating discounts to planning investments — mastering percentages gives you a real edge. Use our mental math shortcuts for quick calculations and our calculator for complex ones.
Calculate percentages instantly → Free Percentage Calculator
Aditya Singh
Mathematics educator and competitive exam coach. Making math fun and practical for 8+ years.