How to Calculate Percentage Change Correctly (and Avoid the Classic Mistakes)
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Percentage change answers one question better than any raw number can: how big was a move relative to where it started? A $5 jump means very different things on a $10 item and a $500 item, and percentage change is what turns those two cases into comparable figures, 50% versus 1%. That is why it shows up everywhere from investment returns and inflation reports to discount labels and personal goals. The skill is not the arithmetic, which a calculator handles, but knowing what to plug in and how to read the sign.
The recipe has three steps. First, find the difference by subtracting the original value from the new value, keeping the minus sign if the result is negative. Second, divide that difference by the original value (its absolute value if it is negative). Third, multiply by 100. Concretely, a salary rising from 50,000 to 56,000 gives (56,000 - 50,000) / 50,000 x 100 = 12%. A website's monthly visits falling from 80,000 to 60,000 gives (60,000 - 80,000) / 80,000 x 100 = -25%, a quarter fewer visitors.
The single most common error is dividing by the wrong number. Percentage change must always divide by the original, the value you started with, not the new value and not the average of the two. Mixing this up produces the well-known asymmetry trap: a stock that drops 50% needs a 100% gain to recover, not another 50%, because the base shrank. If you find yourself comparing two stand-alone measurements with no natural "before," such as two suppliers' prices, you probably want percentage difference (divide by the average) instead, which is a separate calculation.
A second trap appears when your inputs are already percentages. Suppose an interest rate moves from 2% to 3%. It rose by one percentage point, but the percentage change is 50%. Both statements are true and they describe the same event, yet they sound wildly different, which is exactly why headlines and reports get this wrong. Decide up front which you mean: percentage points describe the gap between two percentages, while percentage change describes the relative size of the move. This calculator always returns percentage change.
Once those two distinctions are clear, the tool is fast and reliable. Label your starting value carefully, since swapping the two fields flips an increase into a decrease and changes the size of the number. For reporting, round sensibly but keep extra decimals for anything audited, and sanity-check the sign against reality: if revenue went up, your answer should be positive. Get the base right and respect the points-versus-percent distinction, and percentage change becomes one of the most trustworthy summaries you can put in a report.
Quick tips
- Always divide by the original (starting) value, never the new value or the average; the base you choose determines the whole answer.
- Remember the asymmetry: a 50% drop needs a 100% rise to get back to even, because the base shrinks after the fall.
- When both inputs are percentages, state whether you mean percentage points or percentage change; this tool reports percentage change (e.g., 2% to 3% is +50%).
- Double-check the sign as a sanity test: an increase should come back positive and a decrease negative, so a wrong sign usually means the values are entered in the wrong fields.
The Percentage Change Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.