Percentage Change Calculator
The ability to calculate Percentage Change is a financial superpower. This tool tells you how much a number has moved up or down relative to where it started. Did your portfolio jump? Did that item price drop? This calculator is essential for tracking progress, determining true growth, or calculating that sweet discount. It gives you the percentage change, which is the most useful metric for comparison.
Percentage Change
Track increases & decreases 📈
💡 Understanding Percentage Change
Percentage change measures how much a value has increased or decreased from its original amount. Perfect for tracking salary changes, price fluctuations, or investment returns.
Track Your Growth: The Percentage Change Tool
💡How To Use the Calculator: Three Quick Steps
Forget complicated math. This tool works by comparing an original starting point to a new ending point. It will tell you if the result is an Increase (green box) or a Decrease (red box).
Step 1: Enter the Starting Point
- Original Value: Put your first number here. This is your baseline, the "before" number.
- Relatable Example: Your starting salary last year was $50,000. Enter 50000.
Step 2: Enter the Ending Point
- New Value: Enter your second number here. This is the result, the "after" number.
- Relatable Example: Your new salary this year is $55,000. Enter 55000.
Step 3: Hit Calculate and See the Result
- Click the Calculate Change button.
- The result appears instantly:
- If it's an Increase: The box turns green and shows a positive percentage. For the salary example, the result is 10% (a $5,000 increase, which is 10% of the original $50,000).
- If it's a Decrease: The box turns red and shows the percentage dropped.
This is critical because a 10% raise on a $50,000 salary feels way better than a 1% raise on a $10,000 balance: always understand the relative scale of change. Use this to measure fitness goals, savings growth, or anything that moves over time.
Would you like to calculate a specific percentage change right now, like a recent stock gain?
