Reverse Percentage Calculator

Find the original value before a percentage increase or decrease. Enter the final amount and the percentage change to calculate what the starting value was.

%
Original Value (Before Change)
Amount Changed
Verification

Find Original from Percentage Amount

If you know that a certain amount represents a specific percentage of something, find the original (100%) value. For example: “45 is 15% of what number?”

% of the original
Original Value (100%)
1% Equals
Verification

Remove VAT / Sales Tax

Calculate the price before VAT or sales tax was added. Common rates: UK VAT 20%, US varies by state.

Price Before Tax
Tax Amount
Tax Rate Used

Reverse percentage calculations help you work backwards to find an original value before a percentage change. Whether you need to find the price before a discount, calculate the pre-VAT cost, or determine what number a percentage came from, these calculators show you the answer with step-by-step working.

For standard percentage calculations, visit our percentage calculator. To find percentage increase or decrease, use the percentage increase calculator or percentage decrease calculator.

What is a Reverse Percentage?

A reverse percentage (also called inverse percentage) means working backwards from a result to find the original value. Instead of calculating “what is 20% of 100?” you are solving “if this is 120 after a 20% increase, what was the original?”

This is useful whenever you know the end result but need to find the starting point:

  • Finding the original price before a sale discount
  • Calculating the pre-VAT or pre-tax price
  • Determining an original salary before a raise
  • Working out the starting amount before interest was added
  • Finding what number a percentage came from

Reverse Percentage Formulas

After a Percentage Increase

If a value increased by a percentage to reach the final amount:

Original = Final Value / (1 + Percentage/100)
Use when VAT was added, prices went up, or values increased
Example: Price is $120 after 20% increase
Original = $120 / (1 + 20/100)
Original = $120 / 1.20 = $100

The original price was $100

After a Percentage Decrease

If a value decreased by a percentage to reach the final amount:

Original = Final Value / (1 – Percentage/100)
Use when discounts applied, prices dropped, or values decreased
Example: Sale price is $80 after 20% discount
Original = $80 / (1 – 20/100)
Original = $80 / 0.80 = $100

The original price was $100

Finding Original from a Percentage Amount

If you know that a certain amount equals a specific percentage of the original:

Original = (Amount / Percentage) x 100
Use when you know “X is Y% of something”
Example: 45 is 15% of what number?
Original = (45 / 15) x 100
Original = 3 x 100 = 300

45 is 15% of 300

Common Mistake to Avoid

Do NOT just subtract the percentage from the final value!

A common error is to calculate 20% of $120 and subtract it. This gives $120 – $24 = $96, which is WRONG. The original was $100, not $96. The percentage must be calculated from the original, not the final value.

This mistake happens because people forget that the percentage was calculated on a different base. When you add 20% to $100, you get $120. But 20% of $120 is $24, not $20. The base changed, so you cannot simply reverse the operation.

Step-by-Step Method (Without Calculator)

If you need to solve reverse percentages mentally or on paper:

Method 1: The Division Method

  1. Determine the percentage the final value represents (100% + increase, or 100% – decrease)
  2. Divide the final value by this percentage to find 1%
  3. Multiply by 100 to find the original (100%)
Example: After a 15% increase, a value is 230

Step 1: 230 represents 100% + 15% = 115%

Step 2: 1% = 230 / 115 = 2

Step 3: 100% = 2 x 100 = 200

The original value was 200

Method 2: The Decimal Multiplier

  1. Convert the percentage to a decimal multiplier (1.15 for 15% increase, 0.85 for 15% decrease)
  2. Divide the final value by this multiplier
Example: After a 25% decrease, a value is 150

Step 1: Multiplier = 1 – 0.25 = 0.75

Step 2: Original = 150 / 0.75 = 200

The original value was 200

Reverse Percentage Examples

Example 1: Sale Price to Original Price

A jacket is on sale for $68 after a 15% discount. What was the original price?
$68 represents 100% – 15% = 85% of original
Original = $68 / 0.85 = $80

Original price: $80. The discount saved $12.

Example 2: Remove VAT from Price

A laptop costs $600 including 20% VAT. What is the price before VAT?
$600 represents 100% + 20% = 120% of pre-VAT price
Pre-VAT = $600 / 1.20 = $500

Price before VAT: $500. VAT amount: $100.

Example 3: Salary Before Raise

After a 5% raise, Sarah earns $52,500. What was her previous salary?
$52,500 represents 105% of original salary
Original = $52,500 / 1.05 = $50,000

Previous salary: $50,000. Raise amount: $2,500.

Example 4: Finding Original from Part

A student scored 36 marks, which is 45% of the total. What is the maximum score?
36 = 45% of total
Total = (36 / 45) x 100 = 80

Maximum score: 80 marks

Example 5: Property Value After Drop

A house is now worth $340,000 after a 15% decrease. What was the original value?
$340,000 represents 85% of original value
Original = $340,000 / 0.85 = $400,000

Original value: $400,000. Lost value: $60,000.

Example 6: Restaurant Bill with Service Charge

Your total bill is $66 including a 10% service charge. What was the food cost?
$66 represents 110% of food cost
Food cost = $66 / 1.10 = $60

Food cost: $60. Service charge: $6.

Quick Reference: Common Reverse Calculations

% ChangeDivide ByIf Final is 100
+5% (increase)1.05Original = 95.24
+10% (increase)1.10Original = 90.91
+15% (increase)1.15Original = 86.96
+20% (VAT)1.20Original = 83.33
+25% (increase)1.25Original = 80.00
-10% (discount)0.90Original = 111.11
-15% (discount)0.85Original = 117.65
-20% (discount)0.80Original = 125.00
-25% (discount)0.75Original = 133.33
-50% (half price)0.50Original = 200.00

When to Use Reverse Percentages

ScenarioWhat You KnowWhat You Find
Sale shoppingSale price + discount %Original price
VAT/Tax removalPrice inc. tax + tax ratePre-tax price
Salary historyCurrent salary + raise %Previous salary
Investment valueCurrent value + gain/loss %Original investment
Test scoresMarks earned + percentageTotal marks available
Population changeCurrent population + growth %Previous population
Quick Mental Trick

For 20% VAT: divide by 1.2 (or multiply by 5 and divide by 6). For 10% change: divide by 1.1 or 0.9. For 25% discount: the original was 4/3 of the sale price.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a reverse percentage?

A reverse percentage is when you work backwards from a final value to find the original value before a percentage change was applied. Instead of finding “what is 20% of 100” you are solving “what was the value before a 20% increase made it 120?”

How do I find the original price before a discount?

Divide the sale price by (1 – discount/100). For a 30% discount with sale price of $70: Original = $70 / (1 – 0.30) = $70 / 0.70 = $100.

How do I remove VAT from a price?

Divide the VAT-inclusive price by (1 + VAT rate/100). For UK 20% VAT on a $120 item: Pre-VAT = $120 / 1.20 = $100. The VAT amount is $20.

Why can’t I just subtract the percentage?

Because the percentage was calculated on the original value, not the final value. 20% of $100 is $20, but 20% of $120 is $24. Subtracting 20% of $120 gives the wrong answer because the base has changed.

What if I know a part equals a certain percentage?

Use the formula: Original = (Part / Percentage) x 100. If 45 is 15% of something: (45 / 15) x 100 = 300. So 45 is 15% of 300.

How do I find my salary before a raise?

Divide your current salary by (1 + raise percentage/100). If you now earn $55,000 after a 10% raise: Previous = $55,000 / 1.10 = $50,000.

What is the reverse of a 50% increase?

Divide by 1.5. If something is now 150 after a 50% increase, the original was 150 / 1.5 = 100. Note: a 50% increase requires only a 33.3% decrease to return to the original.

Can I use this for compound changes?

For multiple percentage changes, apply each reverse calculation in reverse order. If something increased 10% then 20%, first divide by 1.20, then divide by 1.10. The order matters!

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