Math

Percentage Calculator

Calculate percentages easily. Fast, accurate, and completely free.

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Result
50

Calculation Details

Formula Used
25% × 200
Decimal Form
0.25 × 200 = 50

Mathematical Formula

P = \frac{X}{100} \times Y \quad | \quad P = \frac{V}{T} \times 100 \quad | \quad \Delta\% = \frac{B - A}{|A|} \times 100

P = Result (percentage value or amount)

X = Percentage rate

Y = Base number

V = Part value

T = Total value

A = Original value

B = New value

Δ% = Percentage change

How to Use this Calculator

  1. Choose a mode using the tabs: "X% of Y", "X is what % of Y", or "% Change".

  2. Enter the required values in the input fields for your selected mode.

  3. The result updates automatically as you type, showing the answer and calculation details.

  4. Use "X% of Y" to find a portion — for example, 25% of 200 = 50.

  5. Use "X is what % of Y" to find the ratio — for example, 50 is 25% of 200.

  6. Use "% Change" to find how much a value increased or decreased in percentage terms.

What Is a Percentage?

A percentage is a way of expressing a number as a fraction of 100. The word itself comes from the Latin per centum, meaning "by the hundred." When we say 45%, we mean 45 out of every 100, or equivalently the decimal 0.45. Percentages appear everywhere in daily life — from store discounts and tax rates to exam scores and battery levels on your phone.

Mode 1 — Finding X% of Y

This is the most common percentage operation. You convert the percentage to a decimal by dividing by 100, then multiply by the base number. For example, to find 18% of 550, compute 0.18 × 550 = 99. This mode is perfect for calculating tips at restaurants, sale discounts on products, tax amounts on invoices, and commission earnings for salespeople.

A quick mental-math trick: to find 10% of any number, simply move the decimal point one place to the left. So 10% of 450 is 45, and 5% is half of that — 22.50. Combine multiples of 10% and 5% to approximate almost any percentage in your head.

Mode 2 — X Is What Percent of Y

When you know a part and a whole, this mode tells you the percentage the part represents. The formula is straightforward: divide the part by the whole and multiply by 100. If you scored 42 out of 60 on a test, 42 ÷ 60 × 100 = 70%, which is your score expressed as a percentage.

This operation is invaluable in business analytics where you want to know market share, in academics when converting raw marks to percentages, and in personal finance for understanding what fraction of your income goes to various expense categories.

Mode 3 — Percentage Change

Percentage change measures how much a value has grown or shrunk relative to its original amount. The formula is: ((New Value − Old Value) ÷ |Old Value|) × 100. A positive result indicates an increase, while a negative result indicates a decrease.

Investors use percentage change daily to track stock performance. If a share price moves from $120 to $138, the percentage increase is ((138 − 120) ÷ 120) × 100 = 15%. Similarly, economists track inflation rates, GDP growth, and unemployment changes using percentage differences.

Common Pitfalls

  • Order matters in % change: A 50% increase followed by a 50% decrease does not bring you back to the original. Starting at 100, a 50% increase gives 150, and a 50% decrease of 150 gives 75 — a net loss of 25%.
  • Percentage points vs. percentages: If an interest rate rises from 3% to 5%, that is a 2 percentage-point increase but a 66.7% relative increase.
  • Division by zero: Percentage change is undefined when the original value is zero, because you cannot divide by zero.

Percentages in Science and Statistics

In chemistry, percentage composition tells you the mass fraction of each element in a compound. In statistics, percentile ranks compare individual scores against an entire distribution — scoring in the 90th percentile means you performed better than 90% of the group. In probability, chances are often stated as percentages for intuitive understanding: a 30% chance of rain is easier to grasp than the fraction 3/10.

History of Percentages

Ancient Romans used fractions based on 100 in taxation, but the modern percent sign (%) evolved in the 15th century from Italian merchants who wrote "per cento." Over time, the abbreviation shortened to "p. cento," then "p.c.," and eventually the two circles of the percent sign emerged as a typographic shorthand. Today, the symbol is universally recognized across all languages and disciplines.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

How do I calculate X% of a number?

Divide X by 100, then multiply by the number. For example, 15% of 300 = (15 / 100) × 300 = 45.

What is the difference between percentage and percentile?

A percentage is a fraction of 100 (e.g., 80%). A percentile is a rank in a data set — scoring in the 80th percentile means you scored higher than 80% of participants.

Can percentage change be negative?

Yes. A negative percentage change indicates a decrease. For example, if a price drops from 50 to 40, the change is −20%.

Why does a 50% gain followed by a 50% loss not return to the original?

Because the base changes. A 50% gain on 100 gives 150. A 50% loss on 150 gives 75, which is 25% less than the original 100.

How do I convert a fraction to a percentage?

Divide the numerator by the denominator and multiply by 100. For example, 3/8 = 0.375 × 100 = 37.5%.

Is there a quick way to calculate 15% tip?

Find 10% by moving the decimal left one place, then add half of that. For a $64 bill: 10% = $6.40, half = $3.20, so 15% ≈ $9.60.

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