Percentage Calculator
Choose a calculation type. Enter two values. Review the formula before using the result.
Download buttons activate after a successful calculation.
Example Data Table
| Calculation | Input values | Formula | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Find a percentage | 18% of 250 | (18 ÷ 100) × 250 | 45 |
| Find what percent | 45 of 180 | (45 ÷ 180) × 100 | 25% |
| Percentage change | 80 to 100 | ((100 − 80) ÷ 80) × 100 | 25% increase |
| Increase a value | 250 by 18% | 250 × (1 + 18 ÷ 100) | 295 |
| Percentage points | 20% to 25% | 25 − 20 | 5 percentage points |
Formula Used
Finding a percentage of a value
Result = (Percentage ÷ 100) × Whole amount
Use this for discounts, tips, commission, tax, and portions.
Finding what percent a part represents
Percentage = (Part ÷ Whole) × 100
Use the complete amount as the whole value. The whole cannot be zero.
Finding percentage change
Percentage change = ((New − Original) ÷ |Original|) × 100
A positive result means growth. A negative result means a decrease.
Changing a value by a percentage
New value = Starting value × (1 ± Percentage ÷ 100)
Use plus for an increase. Use minus for a decrease.
Comparing percentage points
Percentage-point change = Ending percentage − Starting percentage
Percentage points are not the same as relative percentage change.
How to Use This Calculator
- Select the percentage question you need to answer.
- Read the changing input labels before typing values.
- Enter both numbers with decimals when needed.
- Add an optional unit for money, weight, items, or distance.
- Choose the decimal precision you want shown.
- Select Calculate percentage to place the result above this form.
- Check the formula, detailed values, and direction of change.
- Download CSV or PDF when you need a saved record.
Percentage Basics
Percentages describe a part of a whole. A percentage always means “per hundred.” Ten percent means ten parts out of every hundred parts. This idea supports discounts, grades, tax, budgets, finance, and performance reports.
Choose the Right Base
Start by identifying the question. Ask whether you need a portion, a rate, or a change. These calculations use different formulas. Confusing them creates incorrect answers. Identify the base value. The base is the whole, original amount, or reference amount.
To find a percentage of a number, divide the rate by one hundred. Then multiply by the whole value. For example, 15 percent of 240 equals 0.15 multiplied by 240. The answer is 36. This method works for sales tax, commission, tips, and discounts.
To find what percentage one number is of another, divide the part by the whole. Multiply the result by one hundred. Suppose 45 out of 180 items passed inspection. Divide 45 by 180. Then multiply by one hundred. The result is 25 percent. The whole cannot be zero.
Apply Each Formula
Percentage change compares an old value with a new value. First subtract the old value from the new value. Next divide that difference by the original value. Finally multiply by one hundred. A positive answer shows growth. A negative answer shows a decrease. Use the original value as the comparison base.
Be careful with percentage points. A move from 20 percent to 25 percent is a rise of five percentage points. It is also a 25 percent relative increase. These statements are not interchangeable. Percentage points compare rates directly. Relative change compares the size of the movement against the starting rate.
Avoid quick shortcuts when the question contains several percentages. Apply each rate in sequence when required. Two successive discounts do not simply add together. A ten percent discount followed by another ten percent discount leaves 81 percent of the starting price. Record each step. This makes your calculation transparent, repeatable, and easier to audit later for people involved.
Check and Present Results
Rounding matters. Keep extra decimal places while calculating. Round only when presenting the final result. Choose a precision that fits the decision. Money often needs two decimal places. Scientific work may need more. A calculator can show the result quickly, but it cannot choose the correct base for you.
Check your answer with estimation. Ten percent is easy to estimate. Use it to judge whether the final result is sensible. Confirm units and labels. A percentage of dollars remains dollars. A percentage increase usually produces a percentage result and a value difference. Clear labels prevent reporting mistakes.
Use this calculator for common percentage questions. Select the calculation type first. Enter values that match the displayed labels. Set your preferred decimal precision. Review the formula and result details. Export the result when you need a record. Small checking habits protect important decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What does percentage mean?
Percentage means a value out of one hundred. For example, 30% means 30 out of 100. It can also be written as the decimal 0.30 or the fraction 30/100.
2. How do I find 20% of a number?
Divide 20 by 100 to get 0.20. Multiply 0.20 by the whole number. For example, 20% of 150 is 30.
3. How do I find what percent one value is of another?
Divide the part by the whole, then multiply by 100. For example, 40 divided by 160 equals 0.25. Multiply by 100 to get 25%.
4. Why is the original value important for percentage change?
Percentage change uses the original value as its reference. Dividing by the new value gives a different comparison and can misstate the rate of change.
5. Can I calculate a percentage when the whole is zero?
No. Division by zero is undefined. Use another meaningful reference value, or report that the percentage cannot be calculated from a zero whole.
6. What is the difference between percent and percentage points?
Percent measures relative size. Percentage points compare two percentage rates directly. Moving from 20% to 25% is five percentage points, but a 25% relative increase.
7. Should I round before multiplying?
No. Keep more digits during intermediate steps. Round the final result. Early rounding can create avoidable differences, especially in money or repeated calculations.
8. How do successive discounts work?
Apply each discount to the reduced price. A 10% discount followed by another 10% discount leaves 81% of the original price, not 80%.
9. Can this calculator handle negative values?
Yes, it accepts negative values. Interpret the result carefully. Negative bases can make percentage-change comparisons less intuitive, so check the displayed formula and direction.
10. What unit should I enter?
Enter a short unit such as USD, kg, hours, or items when useful. The calculator adds it to value-based outputs. Percentage results remain unit-free.
11. How can I save my calculated result?
Calculate first, then select Download CSV or Download PDF. The exported record includes the calculation type, result, formula, and supporting values.