How to Calculate Discounts โ€” and See Through Sale Tricks

Sale season rewards the shopper who can do the math. Here's the 5-second method, plus the pricing games stores hope you won't notice.

โšก Standing in a shop right now? The Discount Calculator gives the final price instantly โ€” stacked offers and tax included.

The 5-second method

Don't compute the discount and subtract โ€” compute what you pay. 30% off means you pay 70%: price ร— 0.70, one step. An item at 2,400 โ†’ 2,400 ร— 0.7 = 1,680. For mental math, anchor on 10%: 10% of 2,400 is 240, so 30% is 720, pay 1,680. Same answer, no calculator.

Why "30% + extra 10%" is not 40%

Stacked discounts multiply, they don't add. The extra 10% applies to the already reduced price: 2,400 โ†’ 1,680 โ†’ 1,512. That's a true discount of 37%, not 40%. The difference looks small on one item and becomes real money on a big cart โ€” and it's precisely why stores advertise stacked offers instead of a single honest percentage.

Four pricing tricks to watch for

Tax after discount

In most places sales tax or VAT is charged on the discounted price: a 1,512 item with 5% tax rings up at 1,587.60. If a store charges tax on the pre-discount price, that's worth questioning at the counter.

Frequently asked questions

How do I calculate 30% off a price?

Multiply by 0.70 โ€” you pay 70%. 2,400 becomes 1,680.

Is 30% off plus an extra 10% the same as 40% off?

No โ€” the extra 10% applies to the reduced price. True total: 37% off.

How can I tell if a sale is genuine?

Compare the final price across stores and against the item's usual price โ€” not against the printed "original" price.

Check any offer in seconds with the Discount Calculator โ€” it shows the true combined percentage of stacked deals. Brush up the underlying math in How to Calculate Percentages.