Discount Calculator

Calculate the sale price and how much you save at any discount percentage. Free, instant, no signup.

%
Formula: Final = price − (price × discount% ÷ 100)

How to use the Discount Calculator

  1. Enter your values. Fill in the fields with your numbers.
  2. Calculate. Press Calculate to run the discount calculator.
  3. Use the result. Copy the result or try a related tool next.

Why use our Discount Calculator

Instant results. Enter your figures and the discount calculator returns an answer in seconds.
Free & private. Runs in your browser — no signup, and nothing is sent to a server.
Accurate. Uses standard formulas so you can rely on the numbers.

Free to use — premium coming soon

FREE
  • Unlimited calculations
  • Instant results
  • No signup
PREMIUM
  • Remove ads
  • Save & compare scenarios
  • Export results

About the Discount Calculator

The Discount Calculator turns a price tag and a markdown into the three numbers you actually want to see: the amount you save, the final sale price, and the effective percentage off. Enter an original price and a percent-off figure to get the sale price, or enter an original and a sale price to find out what percentage you are really being offered. It works for one-off shopping decisions, but it is just as handy for retailers setting promotions, freelancers offering client discounts, and anyone checking whether an advertised deal is as generous as it sounds.

Reach for it whenever a sticker says something like '30% off' and you want the real out-the-door figure before you commit, or when a store lists both the old and new price and you want to confirm the discount they claim. It is also useful in reverse: if you need to hit a target sale price, you can work out the percentage to advertise. Because the math is quick but easy to fumble in your head, the calculator removes the guesswork at the register, during budgeting, or when comparing two competing offers side by side.

Under the hood the tool uses standard arithmetic. To find a sale price it computes Discount = Original Price x (Percent Off / 100), then Sale Price = Original Price - Discount, which is the same as Original Price x (1 - Percent Off / 100). For example, 30% off $80 is $24 saved and a $56 sale price. To find the percentage from two prices it uses Percent Off = (Original - Sale) / Original x 100, so an item dropping from $165.99 to $89.63 is a 46% discount. The same formulas drive every result you see.

Every calculation runs entirely in your browser, so the prices and figures you type never leave your device or get sent to a server. Results are precise to the cent based on the numbers you provide, though a shop's final receipt may differ slightly because of rounding rules, sales tax added afterward, or membership pricing. Treat the output as an accurate pre-tax estimate of the deal itself, and add any applicable tax separately to see the true amount you will hand over.

Frequently asked questions

How do I calculate the sale price after a percentage discount?

Multiply the original price by the percent off divided by 100 to get the discount amount, then subtract it from the original price. For 25% off a $60 item: $60 x 0.25 = $15 off, so the sale price is $45. The calculator does this instantly when you enter the price and percentage.

How do I find the percentage off if I only know the original and sale prices?

Subtract the sale price from the original, divide by the original price, and multiply by 100. If a jacket fell from $120 to $90, that is (120 - 90) / 120 x 100 = 25% off. Enter both prices and the tool returns the percentage automatically.

If I stack two discounts, like 20% off then 10% off, is that 30% off?

No. The second discount applies to the already-reduced price, not the original, so the discounts multiply rather than add. 20% off then 10% off is 0.8 x 0.9 = 0.72, which is 28% off overall, not 30%. Apply the discounts one after another to see the true combined price.

What is the difference between a percent-off and an amount-off discount?

A percent-off discount scales with the price (10% off saves more on a $500 item than a $50 one), while an amount-off discount removes a fixed sum no matter the price (e.g. $10 off). On cheap items a fixed dollar coupon often beats a percentage, and on expensive items the percentage usually wins.

Does the calculator include sales tax in the final price?

No, it shows the pre-tax sale price and the amount you save. Tax is usually added to the discounted subtotal at checkout, so to estimate the full out-the-door cost, take the sale price from this tool and apply your local tax rate to it separately.

From our blog

How to Use a Days From Today Calculator to Hit Every Deadline

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026

Most deadlines arrive as a duration, not a date. A contract says payment is due 'within 30 days', a store offers a '90-day return policy', a notice period is '14 days', a tax rule gives you '180 days'. Each of these is useless on a calendar until you convert it into a real date you can act on. That conversion is exactly what a Days From Today Calculator does: it anchors the count to today's date and tells you the precise day the clock runs out, so you can schedule reminders, reply to emails, and plan around it with confidence.

The mechanics are simple. Enter the number of days, pick a direction (forward for future deadlines, backward for questions like 'what date was 60 days ago'), and read the result. The tool adds or subtracts the days from today and resolves the answer across month lengths, year boundaries, and leap years that manual counting tends to botch. Quick presets such as 7, 14, 30, 60, and 90 days cover the periods people request most, and the output names the weekday so you immediately see whether the date is workable or falls on a weekend.

The single biggest source of error is the counting convention, not the arithmetic. 'Within 10 days' can mean ten calendar days or ten business days, and it can start counting from today or from tomorrow. Always check the source rule. Legal and financial deadlines frequently count in calendar days but then push to the next business day if the final day is a weekend or holiday; shipping and processing windows are often quoted in business days from the start. Decide which convention applies before you trust the number, because a single misread can put you a day or more off.

Business days deserve special attention. A plain days-from-today count keeps weekends in, so a 30-calendar-day window and a 30-business-day window land on very different dates, often more than a week apart. If your deadline is defined in working days, use a business-day mode that strips out Saturdays and Sundays, and remember that public holidays may extend the window further depending on the rule. When in doubt, calculate both and note which one the underlying agreement actually specifies.

Once you have the exact date, make it stick. Copy it into your calendar with a reminder a few days early, and for important deadlines build in a buffer rather than aiming for the final day, since mail, payments, and approvals rarely clear instantly. Because the calculator runs locally in your browser using your device clock, you can check sensitive contract or legal dates without sending anything to a server, then move straight to acting on the date instead of double-checking your counting.

  • Confirm whether your deadline counts in calendar days or business days before trusting the result, as the two can differ by a week or more.
  • If a rule counts the start date as day one, subtract one day from your input so the tool's day-zero default lines up.
  • Check the weekday in the output: a deadline landing on a Saturday or Sunday often shifts to the next business day for payments and filings.
  • For high-stakes dates, target a few days before the calculated deadline to absorb mailing, processing, or approval delays.

Read the full guide →

Tool by the Super Simple Digital Tools Team. Reviewed by our editorial team. Free to use, no signup required.

Related tools