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Mental Math: Percentage Tricks Everyone Should Know

Simple tricks for calculating percentages in your head - including the reversal trick, the 10% base method, and how to handle successive percentage changes.

Percentages come up constantly - tips, discounts, taxes, investment returns - and reaching for a calculator every time is slow. These mental math techniques let you calculate most percentages in seconds.

The Reversal Trick

This is the single most useful percentage trick:

X% of Y = Y% of X

This works because multiplication is commutative: (X/100) x Y = (Y/100) x X.

Examples:

  • 8% of 25 = 25% of 8 = 2
  • 4% of 75 = 75% of 4 = 3
  • 6% of 50 = 50% of 6 = 3
  • 15% of 40 = 40% of 15 = 6
  • 3% of 200 = 200% of 3 = 6
  • 72% of 50 = 50% of 72 = 36

Whenever one of the two numbers makes for an easy percentage, flip it. “8% of 25” is hard to compute mentally. “25% of 8” (which is just 8 divided by 4) is trivial.

The 10% Base Method

Most percentages can be built from 10%, which is always easy - just move the decimal point.

10% of any number = move the decimal one place left.

  • 10% of $85 = $8.50
  • 10% of $230 = $23.00
  • 10% of $17.40 = $1.74

From 10%, derive everything:

PercentageHow to CalculateExample (on $85)
1%10% / 10$0.85
5%10% / 2$4.25
10%Move decimal left$8.50
15%10% + 5%$8.50 + $4.25 = $12.75
20%10% x 2$17.00
25%20% + 5%$17.00 + $4.25 = $21.25
30%10% x 3$25.50
33%10% x 3 + 1% x 3$25.50 + $2.55 = $28.05
40%10% x 4$34.00
50%Divide by 2$42.50
75%50% + 25%$42.50 + $21.25 = $63.75

Tip calculation shortcut

For a 20% tip: Calculate 10% and double it.

  • Bill: $73 → 10% = $7.30 → 20% = $14.60

For a 15% tip: Calculate 10%, then add half of that.

  • Bill: $73 → 10% = $7.30 → half = $3.65 → 15% = $10.95

For an 18% tip: Calculate 20% and subtract 2%.

  • Bill: $73 → 20% = $14.60 → 2% = $1.46 → 18% = $13.14

Percentage Increase and Decrease

Quick multipliers

Thinking in multipliers is faster than calculating the percentage and adding/subtracting:

ChangeMultiplierExample
+5%x 1.05$100 → $105
+10%x 1.10$100 → $110
+15%x 1.15$100 → $115
+20%x 1.20$100 → $120
+25%x 1.25$100 → $125
+50%x 1.50$100 → $150
-10%x 0.90$100 → $90
-20%x 0.80$100 → $80
-25%x 0.75$100 → $75
-33%x 0.67$100 → $67
-50%x 0.50$100 → $50

The discount shortcut

Instead of calculating the discount amount and subtracting, multiply by the complement:

  • 30% off $60: Instead of calculating $18 and subtracting, just do 70% of $60 = $42. (60 x 0.7 = 42)
  • 15% off $80: 85% of $80 = $68. (80 x 0.85 = 8 x 8.5 = 68)

Successive Percentage Changes

This is where most people’s intuition fails.

A 50% increase followed by a 50% decrease does NOT get you back to the start.

$100 → +50% → $150 → -50% → $75

You lost $25. Why? The 50% increase is calculated on $100, but the 50% decrease is calculated on $150 (a larger base). The decrease takes away more than the increase added.

The general formula:

Starting value x (1 + a) x (1 - b) = Final value

For equal opposite changes: $100 x (1 + 0.50) x (1 - 0.50) = $100 x 1.50 x 0.50 = $75

Successive increases:

Two consecutive 10% increases is NOT a 20% increase.

$100 x 1.10 x 1.10 = $100 x 1.21 = $121 (a 21% total increase)

The extra 1% comes from compounding - you’re earning 10% on the first 10% increase.

Three quick examples:

Stock drops 20% then gains 20%: $1,000 → $800 → $960. You’re still down $40 (4%).

Stock drops 50% - what gain is needed to recover? $1,000 → $500. To get back to $1,000, you need a 100% gain on $500.

Price goes up 25% then down 20%: $100 → $125 → $100. Back to the start! This is because (1 + 0.25) x (1 - 0.20) = 1.25 x 0.80 = 1.00.

The percentage recovery table

How much you need to gain to recover from a loss:

LossRequired Gain to Recover
-10%+11.1%
-20%+25%
-25%+33.3%
-30%+42.9%
-40%+66.7%
-50%+100%
-60%+150%
-75%+300%
-90%+900%

This is why avoiding large losses is so important in investing. A 50% drop requires a 100% gain just to break even.

Calculating Percentage Change

Percentage change = (New - Old) / Old x 100

Shortcut for common scenarios:

Price went from $80 to $100: Change = $20. What percentage of $80 is $20? $20/$80 = 1/4 = 25% increase

Revenue went from $150K to $120K: Change = -$30K. What percentage of $150K is $30K? $30K/$150K = 1/5 = 20% decrease

The fraction trick:

Convert the change to a fraction and simplify:

  • Change of $15 on a base of $60: 15/60 = 1/4 = 25%
  • Change of $12 on a base of $48: 12/48 = 1/4 = 25%
  • Change of $7 on a base of $35: 7/35 = 1/5 = 20%

Percentage of a Percentage

What is 30% of 40%?

Multiply the decimals: 0.30 x 0.40 = 0.12 = 12%

If 60% of your customers are female and 25% of females buy product X, what percentage of all customers buy product X?

0.60 x 0.25 = 0.15 = 15%

Working Backwards from a Percentage

A sweater costs $68 after a 15% discount. What was the original price?

$68 = 85% of the original price (100% - 15% = 85%) Original = $68 / 0.85 = $80

You paid $9 in tax on a purchase. The tax rate is 6%. What was the pre-tax price?

$9 = 6% of the price Price = $9 / 0.06 = $150

General formula: Original = Final amount / (1 + or - percentage as decimal)

The “Roughly” Approach

For quick estimates, round aggressively:

  • 18% of $43: Round to 18% of $40 = 20% of $40 - 2% of $40 = $8 - $0.80 = $7.20 (exact: $7.74)
  • 7.5% tax on $29.99: Round to 7.5% of $30 = $2.25. Close enough for a quick check. (Exact: $2.25)
  • 23% of $87: Round to 25% of $88 = $22. (Exact: $20.01 - the rounding was aggressive, so this is an overestimate, but it gives you the right ballpark.)

For everyday calculations (estimating tips, checking sale prices, approximating taxes), being within 5–10% of the exact answer is good enough. Save precision for when it matters.

Practice Makes Permanent

The best way to internalize these tricks is to practice them in real situations:

  • Calculate the tip in your head before looking at the suggested amounts
  • Estimate the sale price before looking at the tag
  • Calculate percentage changes on stock prices or monthly expenses
  • Check receipts for correct tax calculations

Within a few weeks of conscious practice, these calculations become automatic. The reversal trick alone will handle about 30% of the percentage problems you encounter.

Try the calculator: percentage calculator