Percentages

Percentages represent values out of 100 and are widely used in financial maths, including discounts, profit and interest. GCSE questions often test percentage calculations in real-life contexts.

Overview

A percentage means “out of 100”.

It is a way of expressing part of a whole using 100 as the standard.

\( 35\% = \frac{35}{100} = 0.35 \)

Percentages are used in discounts, interest, profit, loss, exam results, data and real-life comparisons.

You need to be confident converting and calculating with them.

What you should understand after this topic

  • Understand what a percentage means
  • Convert between percentages, decimals and fractions
  • Find a percentage of an amount
  • Work out percentage increase and decrease
  • Solve exam-style percentage problems

Key Definitions

Percentage

A number written out of 100.

Percent Sign

The symbol % meaning “per hundred”.

Percentage of an Amount

A part of a quantity found using a percentage.

Percentage Increase

How much a value goes up as a percentage.

Percentage Decrease

How much a value goes down as a percentage.

Multiplier

A number used to increase or decrease by a percentage in one step.

Key Rules

Percentage to decimal

Divide by 100.

Decimal to percentage

Multiply by 100.

Find a percentage of an amount

Convert the percentage to a decimal and multiply.

Use multipliers

Increase: \(1 + \text{decimal}\), Decrease: \(1 - \text{decimal}\)

Quick Equivalences

Percentage Decimal Fraction
50% 0.5 \(\frac{1}{2}\)
25% 0.25 \(\frac{1}{4}\)
75% 0.75 \(\frac{3}{4}\)
10% 0.1 \(\frac{1}{10}\)
20% 0.2 \(\frac{1}{5}\)

How to Solve

Step 1: Understand percentages

A percentage means 'out of 100'.

\( 60\% = \frac{60}{100} = 0.6 \)
Exam tip: Percent always means divide by 100.

Step 2: Convert between forms

\( 37\% = 0.37 \)
\( 0.48 = 48\% \)
\( 20\% = \frac{1}{5} \)

Percentage → decimal

Divide by 100 (move decimal left).

Decimal → percentage

Multiply by 100 (move decimal right).

Percentage → fraction

Write over 100 and simplify.

Step 3: Find a percentage of an amount

Convert the percentage to a decimal, then multiply.

\( 35\% \text{ of } 80 = 0.35 \times 80 = 28 \)

Step 4: Non-calculator methods

Break percentages into easier parts.

Exam tip: This is often faster without a calculator.

10%

Divide by 10.

5%

Half of 10%.

1%

Divide by 100.

Example

15% = 10% + 5%.

Step 5: Using multipliers (introduction)

Multipliers are used for percentage change.

See growth and decay for full methods.

Increase by 10%

Multiply by 1.10

Decrease by 20%

Multiply by 0.80

Step 6: Exam method summary

See percentage change for increases and decreases.
  1. Convert the percentage if needed.
  2. Choose a method (decimal or breakdown).
  3. Multiply or calculate step-by-step.
  4. Check your answer makes sense.

Example Questions

Edexcel

Exam-style questions inspired by Edexcel GCSE Mathematics.

Edexcel

Write 35% as a decimal.

Edexcel

Write 0.62 as a percentage.

Edexcel

Find \( 25\% \) of \( 240 \).

Edexcel

Increase \( 80 \) by \( 15\% \).

Edexcel

Decrease \( 450 \) by \( 20\% \).

AQA

Exam-style questions based on the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification, focusing on percentage reasoning and real-life applications.

AQA

Express \( \frac{3}{5} \) as a percentage.

AQA

A jacket costs £60. In a sale, the price is reduced by 25%. Work out the sale price.

AQA

A student's score increased from 50 to 65. Find the percentage increase.

AQA

A value decreases from 200 to 150. Find the percentage decrease.

AQA

A student says that increasing a number by 10% and then decreasing it by 10% returns it to its original value.

Tick one box. Yes ☐     No ☐

Give a reason for your answer.

OCR

Exam-style questions aligned with OCR GCSE Mathematics, emphasising problem-solving, reverse percentages, and financial mathematics.

OCR

After a 20% increase, a price becomes £72. Work out the original price.

OCR

A shop reduces the price of a television from £500 to £425. Find the percentage reduction.

OCR

£800 is invested at an annual simple interest rate of 5%. Calculate the total amount after 3 years.

OCR

A population of 12,000 increases by 3% per year. Calculate the population after one year.

OCR

Explain the difference between a 50% increase and a 50% decrease of the same value.

Exam Checklist

Step 1

Check whether you need a conversion, amount, increase or decrease.

Step 2

Use the original amount for percentage change questions.

Step 3

Convert percentages carefully to decimals before multiplying.

Step 4

Use multipliers when the question involves repeated or direct percentage change.

Most common exam mistakes

Conversion errors

Moving the decimal point the wrong way.

Percentage change

Dividing by the new amount instead of the original amount.

Multiplier errors

Using 1.15 for a 15% decrease instead of 0.85.

Fraction form

Not simplifying after writing the percentage over 100.

Common Mistakes

These are common mistakes students make when working with percentages in GCSE Maths.

Forgetting percentage means “out of 100”

Incorrect

A student treats a percentage as a whole number without considering its meaning.

Correct

A percentage represents a fraction out of 100. For example, \(25\% = \frac{25}{100} = 0.25\).

Incorrect decimal conversion

Incorrect

A student divides by 10 instead of 100 when converting a percentage to a decimal.

Correct

To convert a percentage to a decimal, divide by 100. For example, \(35\% = 0.35\).

Using the wrong base value

Incorrect

A student uses the new amount instead of the original amount when calculating percentage change.

Correct

Percentage calculations are usually based on the original amount. Always identify the correct starting value.

Mixing up multipliers for increase and decrease

Incorrect

A student uses the wrong multiplier, such as \(0.8\) for an increase.

Correct

For increases, use multipliers greater than 1 (e.g. 20% increase → \(1.20\)). For decreases, use multipliers less than 1 (e.g. 20% decrease → \(0.80\)).

Not simplifying after converting

Incorrect

A student converts a percentage to a fraction but leaves it unsimplified.

Correct

Always simplify fractions where possible. For example, \(50\% = \frac{50}{100} = \frac{1}{2}\).

Try It Yourself

Practise calculating percentages of quantities and solving related problems.

Questions coming soon
Foundation

Foundation Practice

Find percentages of amounts and simple increases/decreases.

Question 1

Find 50% of 80.

Games

Practise this topic with interactive games.

Games coming soon.

Percentages Video Tutorial

Frequently Asked Questions

What does percentage mean?

Percentage means ‘out of 100’.

How do I find a percentage of an amount?

Convert the percentage to a decimal or fraction and multiply.

What is percentage increase?

It is the amount added expressed as a percentage of the original value.