Percentage Decrease Calculator
Find the exact percentage a value has fallen — or calculate the new amount after applying a known percentage decrease.
📉 What is Percentage Decrease?
Percentage decrease measures how much a value has fallen relative to its original amount, expressed as a percentage. It is the standard way to communicate reductions — price discounts, cost savings, weight loss, revenue drops, salary cuts, and test score declines are all typically expressed as percentage decreases. Expressing a fall as a percentage rather than an absolute number makes it comparable across different scales: a ₹5,000 reduction means very different things on a ₹10,000 product versus a ₹5,00,000 product.
The formula divides the reduction by the original value and multiplies by 100. Like percentage increase, percentage decrease is always calculated relative to the original (larger) value, not the new value. This means going from 400 to 300 is a 25% decrease — the ₹100 drop is measured against the original ₹400, giving 25%. If you mistakenly used 300 as the denominator, you would get 33.3%, which overstates the drop.
An important constraint: percentage decrease cannot exceed 100%. A 100% decrease means the value has reached zero — you cannot lose more than the entire original amount. This is in contrast to percentage increase, which has no upper bound. In finance, however, certain derivatives can theoretically lose more than 100% relative to an initial margin — but for everyday calculations, the 100% cap holds.
This calculator covers all three percentage decrease problems: finding the percentage drop between two known values, calculating a new value after applying a known percentage decrease (useful for discounts and markdowns), and finding the original value before a decrease was applied (useful for reverse-engineering pre-discount prices). All three are frequently needed in shopping, business analysis, and health tracking.