Convert any fraction to a percentage and vice versa. Includes letter grade mapping, visual pie representation, basis points, batch mode, and a reference table of 20 common fractions.
The **Fraction to Percent Calculator** converts fractions into percentages and can also reverse the process by turning percentages back into simplified fractions. It is useful for grades, discounts, ratios, survey results, and any situation where an exact fraction needs to be restated on a common scale out of 100.
The core idea is simple: divide the numerator by the denominator, then multiply by 100. But in practice, people often also want the decimal form, a quick interpretation of the percentage, or a simplified fraction on the way back. That is why this page keeps the fraction, decimal, and percent views together.
Use it when you want a fast conversion between exact part-to-whole notation and the percentage language used in reporting, classrooms, and everyday comparisons. The extra context matters most when you need to move between exact math and presentation-friendly summaries without losing the meaning of the original fraction. It is also helpful when the same value must be shown as a fraction for computation but as a percent for comparison or reporting.
Fractions and percentages describe the same quantity, but they are useful in different contexts. A test score, discount, portfolio weight, or recipe ratio is often easier to compare as a percent, while exact arithmetic usually works better in fraction form. This calculator handles both directions, so you can convert a classroom fraction like 3/8 to 37.5% and also turn a percent back into a simplified fraction without separate steps.
The extra outputs make it more practical than a one-line converter. You can see the decimal form, basis points for finance, a rough letter-grade interpretation, and visual segment and bar displays that help you judge magnitude at a glance. Batch mode also makes it useful for repeated grading or dataset cleanup, where many values need the same conversion rule.
Percent = (Numerator ÷ Denominator) × 100. Reverse: Fraction = Percent / 100, then simplify by GCD.
Result: 1/2 = 50%
Dividing 1 by 2 gives 0.5. Multiplying by 100 converts that to 50%.
Percentages put every value on a common scale out of 100, which makes comparison immediate. For example, 7/10 and 21/30 are equal, but 70% communicates that equality faster than the fractions do. That is why percentages dominate in grades, statistics, finance, and reporting dashboards. The calculator keeps the fraction, decimal, and percent side by side so you can move between exact and comparative views easily.
Percent-to-fraction conversion is more than reversing the decimal point. The result should usually be simplified so it is easy to interpret and reuse. A value like 62.5% is much more meaningful when reduced to 5/8, especially in measurement, ratio, or classroom settings. This calculator performs that reduction automatically and shows the simplest fraction instead of leaving the answer in an awkward unsimplified form.
The segment display and progress bar help translate the number into proportion. That is helpful when checking whether a score is close to a grade cutoff, whether a discount is substantial, or whether a part-to-whole share is intuitively large or small. For repeated conversions, the batch table and common-reference rows let you work quickly without losing the visual context.
Divide the numerator by the denominator, then multiply by 100. For example, 3/5 = 0.6 × 100 = 60%.
Round to the desired precision. For example, 1/3 = 0.3333... × 100 ≈ 33.33%.
Percentages are often easier to compare and understand in contexts such as test scores, discounts, and statistical summaries. They put different fractions onto a common scale out of 100, which makes relative size easier to judge at a glance.
Dividing numerator by denominator converts the fraction to a proportion. Multiplying by 100 then scales it to parts per hundred, which is the definition of percent.
Fractions greater than 1 produce percentages greater than 100%. For example, 5/4 = 1.25 = 125%, indicating the value is 25% more than the reference whole.
A percentage is a ratio expressed per hundred. Converting a fraction to a percent makes comparisons easier because everyone uses the same denominator (100) regardless of the original fraction.