Percent change — increase and decrease

Percent change — increase and decrease

Percent change

If a product cost 100, we say it went up by 25 %. But why exactly 25 %? Let us walk through it.

The formula

percent change = `(new − old) / old × 100 %`

If the result is positive, it is an increase. If negative, a decrease. In school problems we usually state the type in words and write only the absolute value.

Example 1 — increase

Bread used to cost 2.50.

  • Difference: `2.50 − 2 = 0.50`
  • Percent: `0.50 ÷ 2 × 100 = 25 %`
  • The price went up by 25 %.

Example 2 — decrease (discount)

Shoes used to cost 45.

  • Difference: `60 − 45 = 15`
  • Percent: `15 ÷ 60 × 100 = 25 %`
  • A 25 % discount.

Important — *what* you compute the percent of

Always divide by the old value, never by the new one.

This is a common mistake. If you divided 15 by 45 (the new price) in example 2, you would get an incorrect ~33 %.

Increase vs decrease in the opposite direction

Be careful — going the opposite way the percents are not the same:

  • 100 → 80 = decrease of 20 % (divide by 100).
  • 80 → 100 = increase of 25 % (divide by 80).

That is why a 50 % discount followed by a 50 % markup does not bring you back to the original price.

Try it yourself