What Is a Discount Calculator?
A discount calculator converts a price and a percentage — or any combination of discounts, coupons, and tax — into the exact amount you pay and the exact amount you save. Most people can ballpark a 10% or 20% discount mentally, but the moment stacked promotions, flat-dollar coupons, or quantity pricing enter the picture, the mental math breaks down. This tool handles every scenario precisely.
American retailers apply discounts before sales tax in every state. This calculator follows that rule and adds your local tax rate to the already-discounted price — giving you the number that actually comes out of your wallet.
The Four Core Discount Formulas
Every discount problem is a version of one of these four operations:
This calculator covers all four modes. Select the tab that matches what you know and what you want to find.
Stacked Discounts: Why 20% + 10% ≠ 30%
Stacked promotions — "20% off, plus an extra 10% for loyalty members" — are common in US retail. They do not simply add together. Each discount applies to the price remaining after the previous discount:
A $100 item with 20% off becomes $80. Then 10% off $80 is $8 more saved, leaving $72. Total saved: $28 — an effective rate of 28%, not 30%. The higher the stacked rates, the wider this gap grows.
This calculator applies up to three sequential discounts plus an optional flat-dollar coupon, then shows you a step-by-step breakdown so the math is fully transparent.
Step-by-Step Example: Full Scenario
Rachel is buying a $249 winter coat in Texas (8.25% sales tax). The store offers 30% off, she has a loyalty code for an extra 5% off, and a $10 coupon.
Step 1 — 30% off $249: $249 × 0.70 = $174.30. Step 2 — extra 5% off $174.30: $174.30 × 0.95 = $165.59. Step 3 — $10 flat coupon: $165.59 − $10 = $155.59. Step 4 — 8.25% Texas tax on $155.59: $155.59 × 1.0825 = $168.43 total. Rachel saves $93.41 off the original price — an effective discount of 37.5%.
Flat Dollar Discounts vs Percentage Discounts
Knowing which type of discount gives you more depends on the item price. A $50 flat coupon on a $120 item is a 41.7% effective discount — far better than a 30% percentage discount ($36 saved). But that same $50 coupon on a $500 item is only a 10% effective discount, while a 30% percentage discount would save you $150.
The break-even point between a flat coupon of F dollars and a percentage discount of P% is: Original Price = F ÷ (P ÷ 100). At that price they're equivalent; above it the percentage wins; below it the flat coupon wins.
Multi-Item and Bulk Discount Calculations
Switch to Multi-Item mode to build a complete shopping basket or purchase order. Each line accepts its own price, quantity, individual discount, and flat dollar reduction. A shared sales tax rate is applied across all lines. The results table shows per-item savings and totals — useful for comparing two retailers, auditing a vendor invoice, or estimating a wholesale order.
BOGO and Tiered Pricing
A buy-one-get-one-free deal on a $60 item means you pay $60 for two — a 50% effective discount per unit. Enter $60 as the unit price, quantity 2, and 50% discount to model this correctly. For tiered wholesale pricing (10% for orders over $500, 20% over $1,000), enter the quantity that hits your tier and apply the corresponding discount percentage.
How to Read Your Results
Sale Price — what you pay after all discounts, before tax. This is the taxable amount under US law.
You Save — total dollar reduction from all discounts and coupons combined. Multiply by quantity for multi-unit purchases.
Effective Discount — the true overall percentage off, accounting for stacked and flat discounts together. Always lower than the sum of stacked percentages.
Total (with Tax) — the final out-of-pocket amount. Only appears when you enter a sales tax rate.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Adding stacked percentages together. As shown above, 20% + 10% is 28% effective, not 30%. This matters when comparing promotional offers.
Applying tax before the discount. US retailers tax the discounted price. If you calculate tax first, then subtract the discount, you over-count your tax liability.
Confusing "off the original" with "off the already-discounted price." "An extra 20% off sale prices" means 20% off the post-discount price — not 20% off the original. This calculator handles both scenarios through the stacked discount fields.
Disclaimer
This calculator is provided for informational and estimation purposes. Actual prices, tax rates, and promotional terms are set by retailers and may vary. Always confirm the final price at checkout. Tax rates used are examples only — verify your local combined rate with your state's Department of Revenue.