Failure Percentage Calculator

Analyze failures, passes, trends, and cost impact precisely. Enter totals, targets, and comparison values easily. See clear charts, exports, formulas, examples, and practical insights.

Calculator Inputs

Use the fields below to compute failure percentage and related metrics.

Reset

Example Data Table

Scenario Total Cases Failed Cases Passed Cases Failure % Success %
Math Practice Set A 200 14 186 7.00% 93.00%
Quiz Batch B 120 9 111 7.50% 92.50%
Inspection Lot C 500 18 482 3.60% 96.40%
Exam Cohort D 80 12 68 15.00% 85.00%

Formula Used

Failure Percentage
Failure Percentage = (Failed Cases ÷ Total Cases) × 100
Success Percentage
Success Percentage = (Passed Cases ÷ Total Cases) × 100
Passed Cases
Passed Cases = Total Cases − Failed Cases
Failures per 1000
Failures per 1000 = (Failed Cases ÷ Total Cases) × 1000
Target Gap
Target Gap = Actual Failure Percentage − Target Failure Percentage
Relative Change from Previous
Relative Change = ((Current Failure % − Previous Failure %) ÷ Previous Failure %) × 100

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter a label so the result is easier to identify later.
  2. Type the total number of cases in the dataset.
  3. Enter how many of those cases failed.
  4. Optionally add a passed-case check for validation.
  5. Add a target maximum failure percentage to measure variance.
  6. Add a previous failure percentage to compare trend direction.
  7. Enter cost per failure if you want impact estimation.
  8. Choose the number of decimal places for displayed values.
  9. Press the calculate button to show results above the form.
  10. Use the export buttons to save results as CSV or PDF.

FAQs

1) What does failure percentage mean?

Failure percentage shows the share of failed cases out of all observed cases. It converts that share into a percentage, making comparisons easier across tests, batches, samples, or performance reviews.

2) How is failure percentage different from success percentage?

Failure percentage measures the failed portion. Success percentage measures the non-failed portion. In a complete dataset, both values sum to 100%, so each one complements the other.

3) Can I use this calculator for exams and quizzes?

Yes. You can use it for exam results, quiz outcomes, defect counts, rejected units, inspection failures, or any dataset where total cases and failed cases are known.

4) Why is the passed-case check optional?

It acts as a consistency check. If entered, the calculator verifies whether passed cases equal total cases minus failed cases. That helps catch data-entry mistakes before analysis.

5) What does target gap tell me?

Target gap compares the actual failure rate with your allowed maximum. A positive gap means your current result is above target. A negative gap means performance is within target.

6) Why include failures per 1000?

Scaling failures to 1000 cases makes rates easier to compare across different sample sizes. It is especially useful when percentages feel too small or when operational reporting needs standardized rates.

7) What happens if there are zero failures?

The failure percentage becomes 0%, and the success percentage becomes 100%. Some ratio outputs become undefined because division by zero is not mathematically valid.

8) Can I export the calculated results?

Yes. The CSV button downloads a structured result table, while the PDF button captures the result summary and graph for reporting or recordkeeping.

Related Calculators

percentage score calculatorpercentage difference calculatorproportion percentage calculatorportfolio percentage calculatorcontribution margin percentagetip percentage calculatorpercentage loss calculatorsale percentage calculatorpercent decrease calculatorpercentage growth calculator

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.