Enter an original price and a discount percentage to instantly see the final sale price, how much you save, and the amount you actually pay — with Indian rupee formatting and the price written out in words.
Try:
₹
%
Final price after discount—
Original price—
Discount amount—
You pay—
Final price in words—
How to use
Enter the Original Price — the MRP or listed price before any discount.
Enter the Discount percentage shown on the price tag or offer.
See the Final Price, Amount Saved, and You Pay instantly.
The savings badge confirms the exact discount in both rupees and percentage.
Use the Quick Presets to try common sale scenarios like 30% off or 50% off.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate the price after a discount?
Final Price = Original Price × (1 − Discount% / 100). For example, ₹2,000 at 30% off = ₹2,000 × 0.70 = ₹1,400. This calculator does it instantly as you type.
How much do I save at 50% off?
At 50% off you save exactly half the original price. On a ₹5,000 item you save ₹2,500 and pay ₹2,500. Use the presets above to check any combination quickly.
How do I find the original price from a discounted price?
Original = Discounted Price ÷ (1 − Discount%/100). If you paid ₹700 after a 30% discount, the original was ₹700 ÷ 0.70 = ₹1,000.
What's the difference between a flat discount and a percentage discount?
A flat discount deducts a fixed rupee amount (e.g. ₹500 off), while a percentage discount scales with the price (e.g. 20% off a ₹10,000 item = ₹2,000 off). This calculator handles percentage discounts.
How do stacked discounts work?
Stacked discounts (e.g. 20% + 10%) are NOT simply added to 30%. Apply them sequentially: ₹1,000 after 20% = ₹800, then 10% off ₹800 = ₹720. Run two passes through this calculator for the correct final price.
Did you know?
India's Consumer Protection Act requires retailers to display MRP (Maximum Retail Price) on all packaged goods — you can never legally be charged more than the MRP.
The term "markdown" in retail refers to a permanent price reduction, while a "discount" is often temporary. Sale events like Big Billion Day and Great Indian Sale use both tactics.
Studies show that consumers perceive a 25% discount on a ₹2,000 item as more attractive than ₹500 off — even though they are mathematically identical. This is the "percentage vs. amount" framing effect.