Double Discount Calculator
Calculate the final price after applying two consecutive discounts
Calculation Results
Formula: Final Price = Original Price × (1 - Discount1/100) × (1 - Discount2/100)
Was this calculator helpful?
Help others by sharing your experience
Quick Examples
Common Prices
Common Discounts
Complete Guide to Double Discount Calculator
Master consecutive discount calculations with our comprehensive guide. Learn how double discounts work, when to use them, and how to maximize your savings with professional calculation techniques.
Understanding Consecutive Discounts
Consecutive discounts, also known as successive or compound discounts, are applied sequentially where each discount is calculated on the already-discounted price from the previous step. This differs significantly from additive discounts where percentages are simply added together.
For example, if you have a $100 item with consecutive discounts of 20% and 10%:
- Step 1: $100 × (1 - 20%) = $100 × 0.8 = $80
- Step 2: $80 × (1 - 10%) = $80 × 0.9 = $72
- Final Price: $72 (Total savings: $28 or 28%)
If these were additive discounts, you would save 30% total ($70 final price), but consecutive discounts result in less savings ($72 final price) because each discount applies to a smaller base amount.
Calculation Methods and Formulas
The mathematical formula for consecutive discounts is: Final Price = Original Price × ∏(1 - Discount[i]/100)
Step-by-Step Calculation:
- Convert each discount percentage to decimal (divide by 100)
- Subtract each decimal from 1 to get the remaining percentage
- Multiply all remaining percentages together
- Multiply the result by the original price
This method works for any number of consecutive discounts, making it perfect for complex retail scenarios, business negotiations, or bulk purchase agreements.
Real-World Applications
Retail & E-commerce
- • Seasonal sales with member discounts
- • Coupon codes stacked with promotions
- • Volume discounts with loyalty rewards
- • Clearance sales with additional markdowns
Business & B2B
- • Trade discounts with early payment terms
- • Volume pricing with contract negotiations
- • Supplier discounts with bulk orders
- • Service agreements with multi-year terms
Understanding consecutive discounts is crucial for businesses setting pricing strategies and consumers maximizing their purchasing power. Many retailers use this method to create attractive offers while maintaining profit margins.
Advanced Savings Strategies
Pro Tip: Order Independence
With percentage-based consecutive discounts, the order doesn't affect the final price. 20% then 10% equals 10% then 20%. However, the intermediate prices will differ.
Maximizing Savings:
- Timing: Combine store sales with manufacturer rebates and cashback offers
- Stacking: Use multiple coupon types (store + manufacturer + digital)
- Volume: Negotiate additional discounts for large quantity purchases
- Loyalty: Combine membership discounts with seasonal promotions
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Adding Percentages Directly
Don't add 20% + 10% = 30% total discount. Consecutive discounts compound differently.
❌ Ignoring Terms and Conditions
Always read the fine print. Some discounts cannot be combined or have minimum purchase requirements.
❌ Miscalculating Tax Impact
Consider whether discounts apply before or after tax calculation, as this affects the final amount.