Calculatrice de remise
Calculatrice de remise gratuite - calculez et comparez les options instantanement. Aucune inscription requise.
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Chaque calculatrice utilise des formules standard de l'industrie, validées par des sources officielles et révisées par un professionnel financier certifié. Tous les calculs s'exécutent en privé dans votre navigateur.
Comment utiliser la calculatrice de remise
- 1. Entrez vos valeurs - remplissez les champs de saisie avec vos chiffres.
- 2. Ajustez les parametres - utilisez les curseurs et les selecteurs pour personnaliser votre calcul.
- 3. Consultez les resultats instantanement - les calculs se mettent a jour en temps reel lorsque vous modifiez les donnees.
- 4. Comparez les scenarios - ajustez les valeurs pour voir comment les changements affectent vos resultats.
- 5. Partagez ou imprimez - copiez le lien, partagez les resultats ou imprimez pour vos dossiers.
Discount Calculator
Retailers advertise discounts in a range of formats — 30% off, buy-one-get-one, $20 off over $100 — and it is easy to lose track of what you are actually paying. This calculator converts any discount into a final price and a dollar savings amount, so you can compare deals on equal terms and know exactly what you will spend before reaching the register or checkout page.
How a Discount Is Calculated
Four formulas cover every discount scenario:
- Sale Price = Original Price x (1 - Discount % / 100)
- Savings Amount = Original Price x (Discount % / 100)
- Discount % = ((Original Price - Sale Price) / Original Price) x 100
- Original Price = Sale Price / (1 - Discount % / 100)
The last formula is the reverse calculation — useful when you see a sale price tagged on a shelf and want to verify the original price the retailer is claiming.
Worked Examples
Example 1 — Black Friday clothing purchase A jacket is listed at $140 with a 35% off tag. Sale Price = $140 x (1 - 0.35) = $140 x 0.65 = $91.00. Savings = $49.00.
Example 2 — Stacking a store discount with a coupon A $200 appliance is already 20% off (sale price: $160), and you have a 10% off coupon. Apply the coupon to the sale price: $160 x 0.90 = $144.00. Total savings = $56.00, which equals 28% off the original — not 30%, because the coupon applies to the already-reduced price.
Example 3 — Reverse-calculating the original price A laptop shows a sale price of $595 at “25% off.” Reverse formula: $595 / (1 - 0.25) = $595 / 0.75 = $793.33 implied original price. If competitors sell the same model for $699, the “original” price is inflated and the real discount is closer to 15%.
Discount Reference Table
| Original Price | Discount % | Savings | Sale Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| $20.00 | 10% | $2.00 | $18.00 |
| $50.00 | 20% | $10.00 | $40.00 |
| $80.00 | 25% | $20.00 | $60.00 |
| $100.00 | 30% | $30.00 | $70.00 |
| $120.00 | 33% | $39.60 | $80.40 |
| $150.00 | 40% | $60.00 | $90.00 |
| $200.00 | 50% | $100.00 | $100.00 |
| $500.00 | 15% | $75.00 | $425.00 |
| $1,000.00 | 60% | $600.00 | $400.00 |
| $75.00 | 5% | $3.75 | $71.25 |
When to Use
- Evaluating whether a “sale” price is genuinely lower than what competitors charge
- Comparing a percentage discount against a dollar-off coupon on the same item
- Calculating the final price of stacked promotions before you commit to buying
- Verifying a retailer’s advertised original price by reverse-calculating from the sale price
- Budgeting for seasonal shopping events like Black Friday or back-to-school sales where multiple items are discounted at different rates
Common Mistakes
- Adding stacked discounts together — a 20% discount followed by a 10% discount is not 30% off; the combined savings are 28% because the second discount applies to the already-reduced price.
- Ignoring the reference price — some retailers inflate the “original” price before a sale so the discount percentage looks larger; always cross-check the supposed original price against other sellers.
- Comparing percentages instead of final prices — a 50% discount on an overpriced item may cost more than a 15% discount on a fairly priced competitor; the final dollar amount is what you actually pay.
- Skipping shipping and tax — a better percentage discount can evaporate after adding shipping or a higher tax rate; compare total out-of-pocket costs, not pre-tax and pre-shipping prices.
Real-World Applications
Major U.S. retailers including Target, Amazon, and department store chains run stacking promotions — store card discounts, app-exclusive coupons, and seasonal markdowns can layer on top of each other during peak retail events. Shoppers who understand how sequential discounts compound can identify which combination of available coupons produces the best final price. Consumer advocacy researchers have also found that “original” prices on e-commerce sites fluctuate frequently, making price-history tools and reverse-calculation a practical way to confirm a deal is real before purchasing.
Tips
- To mentally calculate 25% off, divide the price by 4; for 20% off, find 10% and double it; for 50% off, halve the price
- When applying stacked discounts, order does not change the final price mathematically — 20% then 10% equals 10% then 20% — but it does change intermediate step values
- For a “buy 2 get 1 free” deal, divide the cost of 3 items by 3 to find the effective per-unit price; this equals 33.3% off per item, which may be less than a straightforward 40% sale elsewhere
- Use the reverse formula any time a retailer displays a sale price without showing the original — type the sale price and discount percentage to check whether the claimed original price is plausible
- Dollar-off coupons beat percentage discounts on low-cost items: $10 off a $30 item is 33.3% savings, better than 25% off ($7.50 savings)
- After finding the best percentage deal, add shipping and local sales tax to compare total checkout costs across stores
Questions fréquentes
Comment calculer le prix de vente apres une remise en pourcentage ?
Comment fonctionnent les remises cumulees -- est-ce que 20 % plus 10 % de remise equivalent a 30 % ?
Comment calculer le prix d'origine si je ne connais que le prix de vente et le pourcentage de remise ?
Un pourcentage de remise plus eleve est-il toujours une meilleure affaire ?
Comment comparer un bon de reduction en valeur absolue et une remise en pourcentage ?
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