🏷️ Deal Savings Calculator
Put the original price next to the sale or auction price, stack a coupon if you have one, and see exactly what you save — in dollars, in percent, per unit, and whether it clears your target discount.
Informational estimates only — taxes and shipping aren't included.
🧮 Measure the Discount
🏷️ Your savings
What is a Deal Savings Calculator?
A slashed price on a listing tells you the seller wants you to feel like you're winning — but the only honest measure of a deal is the discount against what the item genuinely costs elsewhere. This calculator turns two prices and an optional coupon into a clear savings figure you can trust.
Set a target discount and it becomes a buying rule: the tool flags whether a flash sale or auction win actually clears your bar, so you skip the mediocre markdowns and pounce on the real bargains. The price-per-unit line keeps multi-buys honest too.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How is the savings percentage calculated?
It's the amount saved divided by the original price, times 100. The amount saved is the original price minus the final price, where the final price is the sale price after any coupon. So a $100 item at $65 with no coupon saves $35, or 35% — the discount measured against what it used to cost, not against the sale price.
How does the coupon stack?
The coupon percentage comes off the sale price, not the original. If a $100 item is on sale for $80 and you add a 10% coupon, the final price is $72 — 80 minus 10% — and the savings are measured against the original $100, giving 28%. That mirrors how most checkout discounts actually apply.
What's the target discount check for?
Many deal hunters have a rule — say, only buy if it's at least 30% off. Enter that threshold and the tool tells you whether the deal clears it, so you can decide at a glance instead of doing the math. It's a quick discipline check to avoid being tempted by a modest markdown dressed up as a bargain.
Does this include tax and shipping?
No — this tool focuses on the discount itself. Taxes, shipping, fees, and import duties can change which deal is actually cheaper, so for the true delivered cost use the landed-cost calculator. Treat these as informational estimates of the headline savings, not the final out-the-door price.