Calculator

Discount Pricing Calculator

Use this before you run a promotion so discount pricing does not quietly erase the economics you need.

Result

Discount Impact

See how a discount changes price, profit per sale, and total profit across expected orders.

Discount impact is easiest to understand when you compare the new price and profit per sale against the volume you expect to move.

Discounted price
$85.00
Profit per sale
$40.00
Total profit change
-$1,500.00
Margin change
-7.94%

Breakdown

Plain-English math so the result stays easy to explain.

  • Regular price
    $100.00
  • Cost per sale
    $45.00
  • Discount %
    15.0%
  • Expected orders
    100

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Discounts

Discount Pricing Calculator

Use this before you run a promotion so discount pricing does not quietly erase the economics you need.

This calculator helps sellers turn a proposed discount into concrete price and profit outcomes before the promotion goes live.

How to use this page

Start with your best current estimate, adjust the inputs until the result feels realistic, and use the related tools below when you want to pressure-test price, profit, or payout from another angle.

See how a discount changes price, profit per sale, and total profit across expected orders.

Use the calculator with the examples below to test ideas quickly and come back to the same setup later.

Related calculators

Keep moving through the launch pages without rewriting your pricing math.

Worked examples

Start from a realistic scenario

Each example opens the same calculator with shareable URL state.

Standard ecommerce promotion

A simple discount check before launching a storewide campaign.

$85.00discounted price

Load this example

Deeper seasonal sale

A larger discount with more expected volume that still needs a profitability check.

$105.00discounted price

Load this example

FAQ

Quick answers

Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.

What is the most important number here?

Usually profit per sale, because it shows what the promotion does to the economics of each order before you even think about more volume.

Why include expected orders?

Expected orders helps turn the per-sale impact into a total promotion outcome instead of stopping at a single transaction.