Metrics Calculator

Updated March 14, 2026

Percentage Decrease Calculator

Subtract the new value from the original, divide by the original, and multiply by 100. Formula: ((Old - New) / Old) x 100. Maximum possible decrease is 100% (reaching zero).

Percentage change from X to Y

Key Takeaways

  • Formula: ((Old - New) / Old) x 100 = % decrease.
  • A 100% decrease means the value reached zero.
  • Multiply original by (1 - %/100) to get new value.
  • A 50% decrease requires a 100% increase to recover.
  • Maximum possible percentage decrease is 100%.

How Do You Calculate Percentage Decrease?

Subtract the new value from the original value, divide by the original value, and multiply by 100. The formula is: Percentage Decrease = ((Old - New) / Old) x 100. You can also use the percentage change formula and simply note the negative result indicates a decrease.

Sam Okafor lists a house that was originally priced at $425,000. After 60 days on market, the seller reduces to $389,000. The percentage decrease: ((425,000 - 389,000) / 425,000) x 100 = 8.5% decrease. He advises that a 5 to 10% reduction typically generates renewed interest, while a smaller cut may not change buyer perception.

Recovery from Percentage Decreases

% Decrease Value (from 100) % Increase to Recover Recovery Difficulty
10%9011.1%Easy
20%8025.0%Moderate
33%6749.3%Hard
50%50100.0%Very hard
75%25300.0%Extreme
90%10900.0%Nearly impossible
95%51,900.0%Practically impossible

Source: Standard percentage formula.

Real-World Applications

Inventory Shrinkage

Marco tracks food waste at his restaurant. Last month he ordered $12,400 in ingredients and discarded $930 worth of spoiled items. Shrinkage rate: ((12,400 - 11,470) / 12,400) x 100 = 7.5%. Industry average is 4 to 10%. By switching to smaller, more frequent deliveries, he reduces waste to $580 (4.7%), saving $350 per month = $4,200 per year.

Website Traffic Drop

A digital marketer investigates a traffic decline. Monthly visitors dropped from 28,500 to 19,200. The percentage decrease: ((28,500 - 19,200) / 28,500) x 100 = 32.6%. A search algorithm update is identified as the cause. To recover to 28,500, the site needs a 48.4% increase from the current 19,200 — nearly half again as much growth.

Weight Loss Progress

An athlete needs to make a wrestling weight class. Starting at 165 pounds, the target is 152 pounds. The required decrease: ((165 - 152) / 165) x 100 = 7.9%. At a safe rate of 1% body weight per week, this takes about 8 weeks. Trainers warn against cutting more than 10% in a season, as performance drops exponentially beyond that threshold.

Use the percentage calculator for all-in-one percentage math, the percentage increase calculator to measure gains, or the discount calculator to apply percentage decreases directly to prices.

This calculator provides mathematical results for informational purposes. For financial, investment, or health decisions based on percentage changes, consult a qualified professional.


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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate percentage decrease?

Subtract the new value from the original value, divide by the original value, and multiply by 100. Formula: ((Old - New) / Old) x 100. For example, if price drops from $80 to $60: ((80 - 60) / 80) x 100 = 25% decrease.

What is the percentage decrease from 200 to 150?

The percentage decrease from 200 to 150 is 25%. Calculation: ((200 - 150) / 200) x 100 = 25%. The new value is 75% of the original.

Can a percentage decrease be more than 100%?

No. A 100% decrease means the value dropped to zero. You cannot decrease by more than 100% because that would require a negative value. However, a negative number going further negative is a decrease in absolute terms.

How do I find the new value after a percentage decrease?

Multiply the original value by (1 - percentage/100). For example, to decrease $80 by 25%: $80 x 0.75 = $60. A 25% decrease means keeping 75% of the original.

Why is a 50% decrease followed by a 50% increase not equal?

Because the base changes. Starting at 100, a 50% decrease gives 50. A 50% increase on 50 gives 75, not 100. To return to 100 from 50, you need a 100% increase. Decreases and increases are not symmetric. It always takes a larger percentage increase to recover from a decrease.

How often should I monitor percentage decreases?

Monitor decreases at the same frequency as the metric matters. Track investment portfolio declines daily or weekly during volatile periods. Review business metrics like revenue, traffic, or conversion rates monthly. Check inventory shrinkage quarterly. Early detection of small percentage decreases prevents larger losses from going unnoticed.