How Do You Calculate Percentage Increase?
Subtract the old value from the new value, divide by the old value, and multiply by 100. The formula is: Percentage Increase = ((New - Old) / Old) x 100. The result tells you how much larger the new value is relative to the original, expressed as a percentage.
Marco tracks monthly revenue at his restaurant. January revenue was $42,000 and February was $51,000. The percentage increase: ((51,000 - 42,000) / 42,000) x 100 = 21.4% increase. He attributes the jump to a Valentine Day prix fixe menu that brought in 180 extra covers.
Common Percentage Increases
| Original | New Value | % Increase | Multiplier |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 110 | 10% | 1.10x |
| 100 | 125 | 25% | 1.25x |
| 100 | 150 | 50% | 1.50x |
| 100 | 175 | 75% | 1.75x |
| 100 | 200 | 100% | 2.00x (doubled) |
| 100 | 300 | 200% | 3.00x (tripled) |
| 100 | 500 | 400% | 5.00x |
| 100 | 1,000 | 900% | 10.00x |
Source: Standard percentage formula.
Real-World Applications
Sales Growth Analysis
A marketing team analyzes quarterly ad campaign results. Website traffic went from 3,200 to 5,100 visitors per month. Percentage increase: ((5,100 - 3,200) / 3,200) x 100 = 59.4%. Lead form submissions went from 48 to 89, a 85.4% increase. The higher lead increase suggests the new traffic is better qualified, not just more volume.
Price Increase Impact
Leah raises her signature cake price from $45 to $52. The percentage increase: ((52 - 45) / 45) x 100 = 15.6%. She monitors order volume over the next month: orders dropped from 120 to 108 (a 10% decrease). Since revenue increased from $5,400 to $5,616 (a 4% increase), the price hike was worthwhile despite losing some customers.
Fitness Progress Tracking
A track coach monitors athletes over the season. A sprinter improved from 12.1 seconds to 11.6 seconds in the 100m. The time decreased, so this is a 4.1% improvement. In terms of speed: from 8.26 m/s to 8.62 m/s is a 4.4% speed increase. Even small percentage improvements at the elite level can mean the difference between first and last place.
Use the percentage calculator for all-in-one percentage math, the percentage decrease calculator when values go down, or the markup calculator to convert percentage increases into selling prices and profit margins.
This calculator provides mathematical results for informational purposes. For financial decisions based on growth rates or percentage changes, consult a qualified professional.