Standard annual increase
A 10 percent increase on a familiar selling price.
$132.00new price
Load this exampleCalculator
Use this when you want to model a price increase cleanly before you pressure-test demand or profit.
Result
Measure the impact of increasing or decreasing a price by a chosen percentage.
Plain-English math so the result stays easy to explain.
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Pricing
Use this when you want to model a price increase cleanly before you pressure-test demand or profit.
This calculator gives you a fast view of the new price and price delta so you can talk about an increase in concrete terms first.
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.
Measure the impact of increasing or decreasing a price by a chosen percentage.
Use the calculator with the examples below to test ideas quickly and come back to the same setup later.
Keep moving through the launch pages without rewriting your pricing math.
Worked examples
Each example opens the same calculator with shareable URL state.
A 10 percent increase on a familiar selling price.
$132.00new price
Load this exampleA more aggressive increase used to test a higher-ticket offer.
$1,003.00new price
Load this exampleFAQ
Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.
Because customers and internal teams often respond more clearly to the actual dollar difference than to the percentage alone.
No. It shows the new number cleanly, but you should use profit, margin, or order-value tools if you want to pressure-test the impact.