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Tricks Vault Quantitative Aptitude Percentages
Quantitative Aptitude · Percentages

Successive Percentage Change

Combine two percentage changes into one in a single step.

\text{Net change} = a + b + \dfrac{ab}{100}\,\%

1How it works

Instead of applying two percentage changes one after another, this formula gives the single net change in one go. Use a minus sign for a decrease.

2How to apply (in seconds)

  1. Write the two changes as a and b (negative for a decrease).
  2. Compute a + b + (a×b)/100.
  3. A positive result is a net increase; a negative result is a net decrease.

3Worked examples

Example 1 Worked solution
Q. A price is increased by 20% then decreased by 10%. Net change?
  1. a = +20, b = −10.
  2. Net = 20 + (−10) + (20 × −10)/100.
  3. = 10 − 2.
✓ +8% (net increase)
Example 2 Worked solution
Q. Two successive discounts of 20% and 25%. Single equivalent discount?
  1. a = −20, b = −25.
  2. Net = −20 − 25 + (−20 × −25)/100.
  3. = −45 + 5.
✓ 40% discount

4When to use it

  • Successive discounts and successive hikes.
  • Population growth or decline over two periods.

5Cautions & tips

  • !Always make a decrease negative.
  • !Order does not matter — a and b can be swapped.