25% off $25
Instant sale price and savings for 25% off $25. Adjust any field below to try your own numbers.
Sale Price
$18.75
You Save
$6.25
Effective Discount
25.0%
Example
A $25.00 item with a 25.0% discount saves $6.25, for a final sale price of $18.75.
Original price split between sale price and savings
- Sale Price: $18.75
- Amount Saved: $6.25
What is a Discount Calculator?
A discount calculator finds the sale price and the amount saved when a percentage or fixed dollar amount is taken off an original price. It works both ways: enter a percent-off discount (like "25% off") or a fixed-amount discount (like a "$20 coupon"), and see exactly how much you'll pay and how much you'll save.
Retailers advertise discounts in both formats depending on the promotion — percentage discounts scale with the item's price (a 20% discount saves more on a $500 item than a $50 one), while fixed discounts (coupons, gift cards, rebates) save the same dollar amount regardless of price.
Discount Formulas
For a percent-off discount:
For a fixed-amount discount, simply subtract the flat amount:
Percent Off vs. Fixed Amount Off
These two discount types behave very differently as the original price changes. A 20% discount always removes one-fifth of the price, whether the item costs $10 or $10,000 — the dollar savings scale with the price. A $20-off coupon removes exactly $20 no matter what, so it is a much bigger relative discount on a cheap item than on an expensive one. When comparing two promotions, convert both to the same format (either both as a dollar amount or both as a percentage of the price) before deciding which one saves more.
Stacking Multiple Discounts
When two percentage discounts are applied one after another — for example, "25% off, then an extra 10% off" — the second discount applies to the already-discounted price, not the original price. The combined effect is always less than simply adding the two percentages together: 25% + 10% stacked is equivalent to a 32.5% discount overall, not 35%, because the second 10% is taken from a smaller number. Always apply stacked discounts sequentially, one at a time, to get the correct final price.
Example — Your Current Inputs
A $25.00 item with a 25.0% discount saves $6.25, for a final sale price of $18.75.
Additional Example — Holiday Sale Jacket
A jacket is marked at $150 for a holiday sale advertising "30% off." The discount amount is $150 × 0.30 = $45, bringing the sale price to $105. If instead the store offered a flat $40 coupon on the same $150 jacket, the sale price would be $110 — five dollars more than the percentage discount, showing why comparing the two discount types matters before buying.
About These Parameters
- Original Price
- The list price or "before discount" price of the item, as marked on the tag or listed at checkout before any promotion is applied.
- Discount (Percent Off Mode)
- The percentage taken off the original price, such as 20% or 50%. Common in seasonal sales, clearance events, and storewide promotions.
- Discount Amount (Fixed Amount Off Mode)
- A flat dollar amount taken off the price, regardless of what the item costs — typical of coupons, gift cards applied at checkout, mail-in rebates, and loyalty credits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 20% off the same as a $20 discount on a $100 item?
Yes, in that one specific case they're equal — 20% of $100 is $20. But they diverge immediately on any other price: 20% off a $200 item saves $40, while a flat $20 coupon still only saves $20. Percentage discounts scale with price; fixed discounts don't.
How do I calculate two stacked discounts, like 20% off plus an extra 10%?
Apply them one at a time, not added together. First take 20% off the original price to get an intermediate price, then take 10% off that intermediate price. The combined effect (28% off the original in this example) is always slightly less than simply adding the percentages (30%), because the second discount is calculated on an already -reduced amount.
Does the discount apply before or after sales tax?
Almost always before. Retailers apply the discount to the item's price first, then calculate sales tax on the already-discounted amount. This calculator computes the pre-tax sale price — use the Sales Tax Calculator afterward if you also want the final tax-inclusive total.
What discount percentage does a "buy one, get one 50% off" deal work out to?
On two identical items, "buy one get one 50% off" means you pay full price for the first item and half price for the second, so you pay 150% of one item's price for two items — equivalent to a 25% discount on the combined total, not 50%.