Discount Calculator Saudi Arabia

Stop guessing at the checkout line or struggling with margin math before launching your next viral ad campaign. Whether you are a savvy shopper hunting for Black Friday deals, or a digital marketer structuring a scroll-stopping Facebook promotion, our free online discount calculator delivers instant, exact numbers.

Find out exactly how much you are saving, what your final out-of-pocket cost will be, and effortlessly factor in your local sales tax—all in one place.

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Discount Calculator

Calculate your final price and total savings

Final Price to Pay
Original Price
Total Amount Saved

How to Use the Discount Calculator

We built this tool to be fast and intuitive. Follow these three simple steps to run your numbers:

  1. Enter the Original Price: Input the base retail price of the item or service before any coupons or sales are applied.

  2. Input the Discount Percentage: Enter the percentage off (e.g., 20%). You can also click one of our quick-select preset buttons for standard retail discounts.

  3. Add Sales Tax (Optional): If you want to know the true, final cost at the register, enter your state or local sales tax percentage.

Click “Calculate Final Price” to instantly view your total cash savings, the discounted subtotal, and the final cost including tax.

Understanding the Math: How Discounts Work

If you prefer to understand the mechanics behind the numbers, calculating a discount is simple arithmetic. Here is the formula our tool uses:

Finding the Savings Amount: Multiply the original price by the discount percentage (as a decimal).

Example: 20% off a $150 item. $150 × 0.20 = $30 saved.

Finding the Final Price: Subtract the savings amount from the original price.

$150 – $30 = $120 final price (before tax).

Real-World Use Cases

  • Retail Therapy: You have a 30% off coupon for a $200 jacket, but you live in a state with a 7% sales tax. Plug those numbers in to see that you will save $60, pay $9.80 in tax, and owe exactly $149.80 at the register.

  • E-Commerce Strategy: You are designing graphic assets in Canva for a holiday flash sale. You need to know if advertising “Save $25” or “Take 15% Off” sounds like a better deal for a $160 product. Use the calculator to realize they are almost identical ($24 vs $25)—allowing you to choose the most engaging hook for your audience.

  • B2B Negotiations: If a vendor offers you a “2/10 Net 30” early payment discount (a 2% discount for paying an invoice within 10 days), plug your $5,000 invoice into the calculator to see if saving $100 is worth parting with your cash early.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. How do I calculate a 20% discount in my head?

The fastest mental math trick is to find 10% first by simply moving the decimal point one place to the left. For a $80 pair of shoes, 10% is $8. To get a 20% discount, just double that number ($16 off).

2. How do I figure out the original price if I only know the sale price?

Subtract the discount percentage from 100% to get your “paid percentage,” turn that into a decimal, and divide the sale price by that decimal. If you paid $60 for an item that was 25% off: 100% – 25% = 75%. Divide $60 by 0.75, and the original price was $80.

3. Can I stack discounts (e.g., 20% off plus another 10% off)?

You can, but stacked discounts are not additive. A 20% off coupon plus an extra 10% off coupon does not equal 30% off. The 10% is applied to the already reduced price. A $100 item at 20% off becomes $80. Taking another 10% off the $80 makes it $72 (a total discount of 28%, not 30%).

4. Is a “$10 off” coupon better than a “15% off” promo code?

It entirely depends on the original price. For cheaper items (under $66), the flat $10 off is a better deal. For more expensive items (over $66), the 15% off code will save you more money.

5. How is sales tax applied to discounted items?

In almost all US states, retail sales tax is applied to the final discounted price, not the original retail price. If a $100 item is 50% off, you only pay tax on the $50 subtotal. Our calculator does this math in the correct order automatically.

6. What is the difference between markup and markdown?

A markdown (discount) is a percentage taken off the retail price. A markup is a percentage added to the wholesale cost to create the retail price. A 50% markup on a $50 wholesale item creates a $75 retail price. But a 50% markdown on that $75 retail item brings the price down to $37.50.

7. Does “up to 50% off” mean everything in the store is half price?

No. Retailers and marketers frequently use the phrase “up to” as a psychological hook to drive foot traffic or ad clicks. It means that some items (often clearance inventory) are half price, while the majority of the store has a much smaller discount.

8. How do BOGO (Buy One Get One) sales translate to percentage discounts?

A standard “Buy One, Get One Free” (BOGO) sale is mathematically equivalent to a 50% discount on both items, provided both items are exactly the same price. A “Buy One, Get One 50% Off” sale is equivalent to a 25% total discount across both items.

9. Why do retailers use prices ending in .99?

This is a pricing strategy known as “charm pricing.” The human brain reads numbers from left to right, so it perceives $19.99 as significantly cheaper than $20.00, even though the difference is only a single penny.

10. What is a “loss leader” discount?

A loss leader is a pricing strategy where a business heavily discounts a popular product—sometimes selling it for less than what it cost them to manufacture—just to get customers in the door. The goal is that the customer will buy other, highly profitable items while they are shopping, making up for the initial loss.