Kortingscalculator
Bereken de eindprijs na korting, het kortingspercentage of de besparing.
Kortingscalculator
Wat is de Kortingscalculator?
A discount calculator determines the final price after a percentage discount is applied, as well as the exact dollar amount saved. Enter the original price and discount percentage, and instantly see what you will pay and what you will save. This tool eliminates the mental arithmetic required when shopping sales, comparing promotional offers, or evaluating bulk pricing deals.
Discount math appears simple — and the core formula is indeed straightforward — but the practical applications extend far beyond basic sale pricing. Stacked discounts, promotional codes on top of sale prices, member discounts on top of clearance items, and variable tax treatment after discounts all create situations where quick mental math fails. A 20% discount followed by a 10% loyalty reward does not equal 30% off — it equals 28% off. On a $200 item, that $4 difference may be trivial. On a $2,000 appliance or $20,000 car purchase, the difference is $200 or $2,000.
For business users, discount calculations are equally essential. Sales professionals need to quote discounted pricing instantly and accurately. Buyers need to calculate the true unit cost after volume discounts. Finance teams need to verify that promotional pricing does not erode margins below acceptable thresholds. This calculator serves all of these use cases with the same simple, reliable formula that powers every retail transaction worldwide.
Kortingscalculator Formule
Discount Amount = Original Price × (Discount Percent ÷ 100) Final Price = Original Price − Discount Amount Final Price (alternative) = Original Price × (1 − Discount Percent / 100) To find original price from final price: Original Price = Final Price ÷ (1 − Discount Rate) To find discount percentage from prices: Discount % = ((Original Price − Final Price) ÷ Original Price) × 100 Stacked discounts (two consecutive): Final Price = Original Price × (1 − d1) × (1 − d2) Effective Discount = 1 − (1 − d1)(1 − d2)
Kortingscalculator Voorbeeld
Example 1 — Standard retail discount: $150 jacket at 30% off. Discount amount: $150 × 0.30 = $45. Final price: $150 − $45 = $105. You save $45.
Example 2 — Stacked discounts: $200 item: 25% sale + 10% promo code. After 25% off: $200 × 0.75 = $150. After 10% off $150: $150 × 0.90 = $135. Effective discount: ($200 − $135) / $200 = 32.5% — not 35%.
Example 3 — Black Friday electronics: $999 TV at 40% off. Discount: $999 × 0.40 = $399.60. Final price: $599.40. With 8.5% sales tax on final price: $599.40 × 1.085 = $650.35 total paid.
Example 4 — Back-calculating original price: You paid $67.50 after a 10% discount. Original price: $67.50 ÷ 0.90 = $75.00.
Hoe de Kortingscalculator te gebruiken
- 1Enter the original price of the item (the price before any discount is applied — the 'was' price or MSRP). Enter the discount percentage as a whole number or decimal (e.g., 25 for 25%, or 12.5 for 12.5%). Both fields are required.
- 2Click Calculate. The calculator applies the discount formula in two steps: first computing the discount amount in dollars, then subtracting it from the original price to produce the final price you would pay.
- 3Review the results: 'You Save' shows the dollar amount removed by the discount. 'Final Price' shows what you will actually pay. To apply additional discounts (promo codes, loyalty rewards), use the final price as the new 'original price' in a second calculation.
Waarom Kortingscalculator belangrijk is
Discount calculations affect nearly every purchase decision in both personal and professional contexts — yet most people rely on rough mental math that consistently produces errors. According to consumer behavior research, shoppers systematically overestimate their savings on stacked discounts by an average of 5–8 percentage points. A retailer advertising '20% off, plus extra 15% off at checkout' makes consumers feel they are saving 35% when they are actually saving 32%. Over thousands of purchase decisions a year, this systematic bias costs the average consumer meaningful money.
The stakes are even higher in business contexts. A sales manager offering a 15% discount on a product with 30% gross margin is cutting margins by half — from 30% to 17.5%. A 20% discount on a product with 25% margins nearly eliminates all profit. Without precise discount calculations built into the sales process, margin erosion often goes unnoticed until quarterly financials reveal the damage. Many small businesses have been run into the ground by generous but miscalculated discounting during promotional periods.
For consumers, understanding discount math provides protection against manipulative pricing tactics. 'Anchoring' is the practice of displaying a high original price next to a lower sale price to make the discount appear larger than it is. A mattress 'originally priced' at $3,000 and sold for $1,200 represents a 60% discount only if $3,000 was ever a real selling price — which it often is not for furniture and mattress retailers, who routinely inflate 'original prices' for marketing purposes. Being able to quickly verify whether a price-and-discount combination is internally consistent is basic financial literacy that saves money.
Beperkingen & Nauwkeurigheid
This calculator computes percentage discounts only. It does not handle: fixed dollar amount discounts ('$20 off'), buy-one-get-one (BOGO) pricing, percentage-off-the-cheaper-item promotions, tiered volume discounts (10% off for 5+, 20% off for 10+), or time-limited flash-pricing structures. Each of these requires a slightly different calculation approach.
The calculator does not include sales tax. In the U.S., sales tax rates vary by state and locality from 0% to 10.25%, and tax is always applied to the final discounted price (not the original price). Factor in your local sales tax rate separately after obtaining the final price from this calculator.
Finally, this tool cannot evaluate whether the 'original price' used as the basis for the discount is legitimate. Retailers sometimes inflate original prices to make discounts appear larger. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has guidelines requiring that 'original' prices represent genuine recent selling prices — but enforcement is inconsistent. For major purchases, research the item's actual price history using tools like camelcamelcamel.com (for Amazon) or Google Shopping price history to verify discount legitimacy before purchasing.
Praktische Tips
- ✓For stacked discounts (sale price + coupon + loyalty discount), always calculate the effective combined discount from the original price rather than adding percentages. Two 15% discounts stack to 27.75%, not 30%. The formula: Effective Discount = 1 − (1 − d1) × (1 − d2) × (1 − d3...). Understanding this prevents overestimating savings and enables accurate comparison of competing promotions.
- ✓When comparing competing offers, always reduce everything to the final price per unit or dollar spent. A 30% discount on a $100 item ($70 final) is a better deal than a 40% discount on a $120 item ($72 final). The percentage means nothing in isolation — only the final price matters for your actual spending.
- ✓For large purchases (appliances, electronics, furniture, cars), negotiate from the final price outward — not from the discount percentage. Saying 'I want to pay $850 for this washer' is more effective than asking for '15% off.' It anchors the conversation on the number that matters and prevents the sales floor from inflating the 'original price' basis for the percentage calculation.
- ✓Remember that discounts save money only on purchases you would have made anyway. A 50% discount on something you did not need is a 100% waste of the money you spent. Evaluate every discounted purchase against whether you would buy it at full price — if the answer is no, the 'savings' are imaginary. The only genuine savings from a discount is the delta between what you pay and what you would have paid at full price for something you needed regardless.
Veelgestelde Vragen
Hoe wordt het kortingsbedrag berekend?
Hoe bereken ik het kortingspercentage als ik de oorspronkelijke en de kortingsprijs ken?
Hoe werken meerdere kortingen (opeenvolgende kortingen)?
Wat is het verschil tussen korting en terugbetaling?
Hoe vergelijk ik aanbiedingen met verschillende kortingen?
Wat is de aanbevolen verkoopprijs (AVP) en hoe relevant is die?
Hoe bereken ik de oorspronkelijke prijs als ik alleen de kortingsprijs ken?
Hoe werkt btw in combinatie met kortingen in Nederland?
Ga Verder
Vertrouwde Bronnen & Methodologie
API-toegang
Binnenkorthttps://api.solviqlab.com/v1/discount-calculatorREST API voor ontwikkelaars. Integreer deze tool in uw app.