Increase CalculatorPrice

Find the updated price of a product or service after applying a percentage increase with this fast, practical tool. Price increases happen regularly in business — whether due to rising material costs, inflation adjustments, new pricing strategy, or updated service rates. Instead of manually calculating each new price, enter the original amount and the percentage increase, and get the final figure instantly. This is useful for business owners, procurement teams, and anyone managing pricing.

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Price Increase Calculator

Interactive calculator engine

Apply a percentage increase to the original price.

New price: 112 | Increase amount: 12

How To Use Price Increase Calculator

  1. Enter the original price of the product or service before the increase.
  2. Enter the percentage by which the price is being increased — for example, 15 for a 15% increase.
  3. The tool multiplies the original price by (1 + increase percentage ÷ 100) to find the new price.
  4. The updated price and the dollar amount of the increase are displayed immediately.
  5. Use the new price in your invoices, price lists, quotes, or product catalog updates.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I calculate a new price after a percentage increase?

Yes. Enter the original price and the percentage increase, and the tool returns the new price along with the increase amount in currency. For example, a $50 product with a 20% increase results in a new price of $60, with the tool showing the $10 increase clearly. This eliminates mental arithmetic errors when updating price lists.

How is a price increase different from a markup?

A markup is the percentage added to the cost of a product to arrive at a selling price — it is a pricing strategy applied when setting an initial price. A price increase applies to an already-established selling price to raise it further, typically in response to cost inflation or market changes. The Markup Calculator on this site handles cost-to-price markup calculations.

What are common reasons businesses increase prices?

The most common drivers of price increases include rising raw material or supply costs, general inflation, increased labor costs, updated service tiers or feature enhancements, currency fluctuations for international pricing, and strategic repositioning of a brand or product. Annual price reviews are standard practice for most businesses to maintain healthy profit margins.

Can I use this for salary increase calculations?

Yes. Although labeled as a price calculator, the math works identically for salary increases. Enter the current salary as the original amount and the raise percentage to calculate the new salary. For example, a $50,000 salary with a 5% increase yields $52,500, with the tool showing the $2,500 annual increase.

How do I apply this tool to a list of products?

For updating prices across a product catalog, calculate the new price for each item individually using this tool. If you have a spreadsheet, a formula such as =original_price * (1 + increase_rate) handles bulk calculations efficiently. For a few items or quick spot-checks, this online calculator is the fastest option.

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