What is a percentage — and how it connects to fractions

A percentage is a number or ratio expressed as a fraction of 100. The word comes from the Latin per centum, meaning "per hundred". So 37% simply means 37 out of every 100.

The relationships between percentages, fractions, and decimals are:

  • Percentage → Decimal: divide by 100. So 45% = 0.45
  • Decimal → Percentage: multiply by 100. So 0.73 = 73%
  • Percentage → Fraction: write over 100, then simplify. So 25% = 25/100 = ¼
  • Fraction → Percentage: divide numerator by denominator, then multiply by 100. So ⅗ = 0.6 = 60%

Being fluent in converting between these three forms makes it much easier to calculate percentages in different contexts.

Common percentages to know by heart: - 50% = ½ = 0.5 - 25% = ¼ = 0.25 - 10% = 1/10 = 0.1 - 1% = 1/100 = 0.01

What is a percentage — and how it connects to fractions

How to calculate percentages — three essential methods

There are three core types of percentage calculation. Learning how to calculate percentages means mastering all three.

Method 1: Find a percentage of a number

Question: What is 30% of 240?

Method: Multiply the number by the percentage expressed as a decimal.

30% = 0.30 0.30 × 240 = 72

So 30% of 240 is 72.

Shortcut for 10%: Move the decimal point one place left. 10% of 350 = 35. Then use this to build other percentages: 20% = 10% × 2; 5% = half of 10%; 15% = 10% + 5%.

Method 2: Express one number as a percentage of another

Question: A student scored 36 out of 48. What percentage did they score?

Method: Divide the part by the whole, then multiply by 100.

(36 ÷ 48) × 100 = 0.75 × 100 = 75%

To calculate percentages this way, make sure the two numbers use the same units.

Method 3: Calculate percentage increase or decrease

Question: A price rose from £80 to £92. What is the percentage increase?

Method: Find the change, divide by the original value, multiply by 100.

Change = 92 − 80 = 12

(12 ÷ 80) × 100 = 15%

The price increased by 15%.

For a decrease: use the same formula — the result will still be positive; just label it a decrease.

How to calculate percentages — three essential methods

Percentage increase, decrease and reverse percentages

Finding the new value after a percentage change

Rather than calculate percentages in two steps, use a multiplier:

  • Increase by 20%: multiply by 1.20
  • Decrease by 15%: multiply by 0.85 (100% − 15% = 85% = 0.85)

Example: A salary of £32,000 increases by 5%. £32,000 × 1.05 = £33,600

Multipliers make it easy to calculate percentages in compound situations — for example, when a price increases by 10% in year 1 and 10% in year 2:

£1,000 × 1.10 × 1.10 = £1,210 (not £1,200 — because the second 10% applies to the already-increased amount).

Reverse percentages

Sometimes you know the value after a change and need to find the original. This is called a reverse percentage.

Example: A coat costs £68 after a 15% reduction. What was the original price?

£68 represents 85% of the original (100% − 15% = 85%).

Original = £68 ÷ 0.85 = £80.

Reverse percentages are a common source of errors — students who calculate percentages by adding the percentage back often get the wrong answer. Always divide by the multiplier.

For parents helping with percentages at home: calculating discounts while shopping, reading nutrition labels, and checking exam percentage scores are all concrete, motivating contexts. The For parents guide has further ideas for everyday maths practice.

Percentage increase, decrease and reverse percentages

Frequently asked questions

How do you calculate percentages without a calculator?
The three most useful mental methods: (1) find 10% by moving the decimal point one place left, then scale up or down. (2) Find 1% by dividing by 100, then multiply. (3) Use fraction equivalents: 50% = ½, 25% = ¼, 20% = ⅕. These three methods let you build any percentage mentally.
What is the difference between percentage and percentile?
A percentage is a proportion out of 100 — a score of 75% means 75 out of 100. A percentile describes a position within a ranked group — scoring in the 75th percentile means you scored higher than 75% of all test-takers. These are related but different concepts commonly confused in exam results and medical charts.
Can a percentage be more than 100?
Yes. Percentages above 100% indicate that something is more than the original whole. If a company's profit increases from £50,000 to £120,000, that is a 140% increase. Percentages above 100% are common in growth, inflation, and comparison contexts.
At what age do students learn to calculate percentages?
Simple percentages (50%, 25%, 10%) are usually introduced around age 9–10 (grades 4–5). Calculating percentages of amounts, and expressing one number as a percentage of another, is typically taught in grades 5–7 (ages 10–13). Percentage change, reverse percentages, and compound interest come in grades 7–9.