Percent Off Calculator

Calculate the sale price after a percentage discount, see the exact dollar savings, apply a second coupon, add sales tax, and compare savings across discount levels. Discount comparison table, coup...

About the Percent Off Calculator

The **Percent Off Calculator** is a shopping-focused tool that tells you exactly how much you save and how much you pay when a discount is applied. Enter the original price and the discount percentage to instantly see the sale price, the dollar amount saved, and what you owe after sales tax.

What sets this calculator apart is its support for **coupon stacking** — stacking a second discount on top of the first. Many shoppers mistakenly add two percentages together (20% + 10% = 30% off), but that is not how sequential discounts work. This calculator shows the true effective discount when two percentages are applied in sequence.

The output panel shows six cards: the sale price, the amount saved, the effective combined discount, the tax amount, the final price including tax, and a cost-per-dollar metric that tells you how much value you get per original dollar. A color-coded **savings bar** visually splits the price into the portion you pay versus the portion you save.

Below the outputs, a **discount comparison table** shows 10 standard discount levels applied to your original price — with savings bars, amounts saved, and after-tax totals — so you can quickly compare deals. A collapsible **coupon stacking table** shows the effect of pairing the first discount with various second-coupon percentages, including the true effective combined discount.

Quick-pick discount buttons (10%, 20%, 25%, 33%, 50%, 75%) and scenario presets (like "$250 − 15% + 8% tax") let you explore instantly without manual entry. Adjust the decimal places to match your currency precision.

Why Use This Percent Off Calculator?

Shopping math gets messy fast once you combine the shelf price, a headline discount, a second coupon, and sales tax. People often compare deals by looking only at the advertised percent off, even though the real checkout total depends on the order of discounts and whether tax is applied before or after the markdown. That makes it easy to overestimate savings or misjudge which offer is better.

This calculator is useful because it separates each step clearly. You can see the first savings amount, the effect of a stacked coupon, the true combined discount, the tax added on the discounted price, and the final amount you actually pay. The comparison table and coupon stacking reference are especially helpful when you are deciding between promotions, planning a purchase budget, or checking whether a "better" sale is really better once all adjustments are included.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter values in Original price ($), Discount (%), Second discount / coupon (%), and any remaining fields.
  2. Choose options in Sales tax rate to match your scenario.
  3. Use a preset such as "10% off" or "20% off" to load a quick example.
  4. Review the output cards and verify both the primary answer and supporting values.
  5. Use the visual section to compare magnitude, direction, or distribution at a glance.
  6. Check the table for step-by-step details, intermediate values, or scenario comparisons.
  7. Adjust one input at a time to see how each parameter changes the final result.

Formula

Sale Price = Original × (1 − discount/100). With stacking: After2nd = AfterFirst × (1 − second/100). Effective % = (Original − Final) / Original × 100. Final = Sale Price × (1 + tax/100).

Example Calculation

Result: For these inputs, the calculator returns the percent off result plus supporting breakdown values shown in the output cards.

This example reflects the built-in percent off workflow: enter values, apply options, and read both the main answer and supporting metrics.

Tips & Best Practices

Why two discounts do not add directly

If an item is 20% off and you get another 10% coupon, the result is not 30% off the original price. The second discount applies to the already-discounted amount. On a $100 item, 20% off takes the price to $80, and 10% off that sale price takes off another $8, leaving $72. The true combined discount is 28%, not 30%. This is why coupon stacking needs a proper calculator instead of quick mental addition.

Price after discount versus final price after tax

Many shoppers stop at the sale price, but the checkout total depends on tax too. A discount lowers the taxable amount in many retail situations, so the tax is calculated on the reduced price rather than on the original sticker price. That means this tool is useful not only for finding the markdown, but also for estimating the amount that will actually leave your wallet. Seeing sale price, tax amount, and final price together prevents confusion when two deals look similar before tax but differ after tax.

Using the comparison tables to judge offers

The discount comparison table shows how the same original price behaves at common markdown levels, which is useful for comparing store promotions or deciding whether waiting for a larger sale is worth it. The coupon stacking table is even more practical when you already know the first discount and want to test several second-coupon possibilities. Instead of recalculating each case by hand, you can compare final prices and effective discount percentages side by side.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you calculate the final price after a percent off discount?

Final Price = Original Price × (1 − Discount% / 100). For example, 30% off $80 = $80 × 0.70 = $56.

How do multiple discounts stack?

Sequential discounts multiply: 20% off then 10% off is not 30% off. It is 0.80 × 0.90 = 0.72, or 28% total discount.

How do you find the original price from a discounted price?

Original Price = Sale Price / (1 − Discount% / 100). For example, if the sale price is $56 after 30% off: $56 / 0.70 = $80.

How do you calculate the sale price from a percent discount?

Multiply the original price by (1 − discount/100) to get the sale price. For example, a 30% discount on $80 gives $80 × 0.70 = $56.

How do you find the original price if you know the discounted price?

Divide the discounted price by (1 − discount/100). If the final price is $70 after a 30% discount: $70 / 0.70 = $100.

Is two 50% discounts the same as 100% off?

No. The first 50% off halves the price, and the second 50% off halves the already-discounted price. Together they give 75% off the original, not 100%.

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