Enter price and discount %. See discount amount and final price. Work backwards too.
Figure true savings. Compare discounts across stores, verify sale prices.
Chain calculations.
Before tax; add 15% HST for Nova Scotia.
Enter original and sale prices.
Subtract from price directly.
A "20% off" sign seems simple: $100 item becomes $80. But stores use several tricks: double discounts ("30% off, then an extra 20%" is 44% off, not 50%), original price inflation (the "original" price was never charged), bundle discounts (3 for $X may cost more per unit than buying what you need at full price), percentage vs fixed ("$20 off" beats "10% off" on items under $200), and tax math (the discount applies to the pre-tax price, but sales tax is on the discounted price).
Only if you'd buy the items anyway at full price. The formula: total discount ÷ quantity = per-item savings. If a 3-for-$30 deal saves you $9, and you'd normally buy 1 at $13, you're actually spending $20 more for items you might not use. Stockpile deals on non-perishables you already buy (toilet paper, toothpaste) make sense. Stockpile deals on perishable or trendy items rarely do.
Stores will often match competitors' advertised prices. Use our calculator to determine the absolute lowest price you'll accept, then ask. For big purchases (cars, furniture, electronics), the listed "discount" is often 10-30% negotiable. Cash discounts still exist for some services. Bundle deals can be good if the bundle price beats individual prices, but verify with math. Always calculate the per-unit cost to compare deals.
The Toolzie Discount Calculator instantly computes the final price after a percentage discount, or works backwards to find the original price or discount percentage. Great for shopping, sales pricing, and financial planning.
Enter 80 as the original price and 20 as the discount percentage. The result is $64.
Yes — switch to 'Find Original Price' mode and enter the sale price and discount percentage.
No — this calculates pre-tax discount prices. Add your local tax rate separately.
Apply the first discount, then use the result as the new original price for the second discount.