SaveTill

Discount Calculator

See the sale price and exactly how much you save.

Last updated: June 2026 · Reviewed by the SaveTill editorial team

Ad space (enable after AdSense approval)
$
Final price
Ad space (in-content)

How to calculate a discount

Multiply the original price by the discount percentage and divide by 100 to find the amount off. Subtract that from the original price for the sale price. Add an optional sales tax percentage and the calculator applies it to the discounted price to show what you'll actually pay at checkout.

The formulas

Amount off = Price × disc% ÷ 100 · Sale = Price − Off · Final = Sale × (1 + tax%)

Worked example

$80 at 25% off:

Why stacked discounts surprise people

Two discounts don't simply add up. A 20% then 10% coupon isn't 30% off — the 10% applies to the already-reduced price, so you pay 0.80 × 0.90 = 0.72 of the original, i.e. 28% off, not 30%.

Common mistakes to avoid

Adding stacked discount percentages together. Applying tax before the discount instead of after. Treating any percentage off as a "deal" regardless of whether you needed the item. Forgetting shipping, which can erase a small discount.

Frequently asked questions

What is 25% off $80?

25% of 80 is 20, so the sale price is $60.

How do I stack two discounts?

Apply them one at a time. 20% then 10% is 28% off, not 30%, because the second applies to the reduced price.

How do I add tax to a sale price?

Multiply the discounted price by (1 + tax rate). Use the optional tax field.

How do I find the percent off from two prices?

(Original − Sale) ÷ Original × 100. From $80 to $60 = 25% off.

Is a discount always worth it?

Only if you needed the item — a percentage off something you wouldn't have bought still costs money.

Is my data saved?

No. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is uploaded.

🔗 More everyday tools: Percentage →  ·  Tip →  ·  Hours →  ·  All tools →