Percentage Calculator

Quickly perform portion calculations, percentage changes, and value adjustments with instant visual breakdowns.

Math Audited
Percentage (X%)25
-100200
Number (Y)200
010000
Result (25% of 200)
50

25% of 200 is 50.

25%
Portion
Selected Portion: 25%
Remaining Whole: 75%
Result = (25 / 100) * 200
Mathematical Audit LogVerified against Mathcentre (UK University guidelines) & Khan Academy peer-reviewed curriculum vectors.Last Audited: 2026-07-10
Mathematical Formula
V = \frac{P}{100} \times W
Core Assumptions
  • Calculations operate in standard real number fields.
  • Percentage changes assume simple relative scale (non-compounding).
Limitations & Exclusions
  • Percentage change from an original base of zero is mathematically undefined.
  • Extreme value ranges might be subjected to floating point rounding conventions.

About the Percentage Calculator

A percentage represents a fraction of 100, expressed using the symbol '%'. It is a dimensionless ratio used to compare proportions, calculate changes, analyze growth rates, and compute financial metrics like tax, tip, margins, and compound growth. Mastery of percentage arithmetic is a fundamental skill in statistics, retail, banking, science, and daily decision-making.

Mathematical Formula & Logic

The three primary percentage calculations are: 1. Finding percentage of a value: Value = (Percentage / 100) × Total 2. Finding what percentage X is of Y: Percentage = (X / Y) × 100 3. Percentage Increase/Decrease: Change % = [(New Value - Old Value) / Old Value] × 100

Step-by-Step Example

1. What is 15% of $80? - (15 / 100) × 80 = 0.15 × 80 = 12. 2. If a shirt price increases from $40 to $50, what is the percentage increase? - [(50 - 40) / 40] × 100 = (10 / 40) × 100 = 25%.

Reference Data & Values

fractiondecimalpercentage
1/20.5050%
1/40.2525%
1/100.1010%
3/40.7575%
1/30.333...33.33%

Frequently Asked Questions

Because the baseline (denominator) changes. If a value increases from 100 to 125, the increase is 25% (25/100). If it decreases from 125 to 100, the decrease is 20% (25/125), because 125 is the new baseline.
Percentage points measure the arithmetic difference between two percentages. For instance, if an interest rate increases from 5% to 6%, it has increased by 1 percentage point, but represents a 20% relative increase in the rate itself.
Compounding percentages cannot simply be added. For two consecutive percentage changes of A% and B%, the net multiplier is (1 + A/100) * (1 + B/100) - 1.