What Percent of a Number Is a Number

How to calculate a percentage of a number

Learn the basics of how to calculate percentages of quantities in this easy lesson! To find a percentage of any number, use this generic guideline of TRANSLATION: Change the percentage into a decimal, and the word "of" into multiplication. See many examples below.

The concepts and ideas of this lesson are also explained in this video:


You have learned that to find 1% of a number means finding 1/100 of it. Similarly, finding 60% of a number means finding 60/100 (or 6/10) of it.

In these expressions, the word "of" translates into multiplication:

1% of 90 → 1% × 90&

60% of $700 → 60% × $700.

We can also write those percentages as decimals:

1% of 90 → 0.01 × 90

60% of $700 → 0.6 × $700.

This gives us another way to calculate the percentage of a number (or percentage of some quantity):

To calculate a percentage of some number, change the percentage into a decimal, and the word "of" into multiplication.

Example 1. Find 70% of 80.

Following the shortcut, we write this as 0.7 × 80.

Remember that in decimal multiplication, you multiply as if there were no decimal points, and the answer will have as many "decimal digits" to the right of the decimal point as the total number of decimal digits of all of the factors. So when you multiply 0.7 × 80, think of multiplying 7 × 80 = 560. Since 0.7 has one decimal digit, and 80 has none, the answer has one decimal digit: 56.0 Thus, 0.7 × 80 = 56.

You can also use "common sense" to reason it through logically: 0.7 × 80 must be less than 80, yet more than 1/2 of 80, which is 40. Since 7 × 8 = 56, you know that the answer must be 56—not 5.6 or 560.

Example 2. Find 3% of $4,000.

First write it as 0.03 × $4,000. Then multiply 3 × $4,000 = $12,000. Lastly put the decimal point where it gives the answer two decimal digits: $120.00.

Example 3. Find 23% of 5,500 km.

Write the expression as 0.23 × 5,500 km and use a calculator to calculate the product. The answer is 1,265 km. This answer makes sense because 10% of 5,500 km is 550 km, so 20% is 1,100 km. Thus 1,265 km as 23% of 5,500 km is a reasonable answer.

1. "Translate" the expressions into multiplication by a decimal. Calculate.

a. 20% of 70

______ × ______ = ______

b. 90% of 50

______ × ______ = ______

c. 9% of 3,000

______ × ______ = ______

2. "Translate" the other way: write the multiplications as expressions of "percentage of the number".

a. 0.6 × 50

_____% of ______ = ______

b. 0.03 × $400

_____% of ______ = ______

c. 0.08 × 6

_____% of ______ = ______

3. Use a calculator to find percentages of these quantities.

a. 17% of $4500

b. 67% of 27 m

4. Use mental math to find percentages of these quantities.

5. a. A lake has a 30-km long shoreline. 6% of it is sandy beach. What percentage of the shoreline is not sandy beach?

6. Twenty percent of a university's 4,000 students have a scholarship.

a. What percent of the students do not have a scholarship?

    b. How many students have a scholarship?

8. Identify the errors that Gladys made. Then find the correct answer.

Find 80% of 50.

    Gladys's solution:
80 × 50 = 4,000

9. Find the expressions with the same value as 20% of $620.

0.02 × $620 $620 ÷ 5
$620 ÷ 10 × 2 2 × $62

1

5

 × $620
0.2 × $620
20 × $620 $620 ÷ 4

11. The table below shows Andy's usage of time in one day.

  a. Calculate the time he spent in each activity.
Round the minutes to the nearest minute.

  b. Label the sections in the circle graph with the name of each activity.

Andy's Usage of Time

Activity Percent Minutes Hours/minutes
Sleep 38%
School 21%
Soccer 10% 144 2 h 24 min
Play 11%
Eating 9%
Chores 9%
Hygiene 2%
TOTAL 100% 1440 24 hours

See also

Percent – free lesson

Percentage of a number using mental math – free lesson

How to calculate percentages – free lesson

Basics of percent of change – free lesson

Interactive fraction, decimal and percentage tool
This tool shows you a fraction visually (bar or pie) and converts the fraction into a percentage and decimal. You can show or hide the equivalent percentage and decimal.
/interactives/fraction_decimal_percentage.php



This lesson is taken from Maria Miller's book Math Mammoth Percent, and posted at www.HomeschoolMath.net with permission from the author. Copyright © Maria Miller.



Practice makes perfect. Practice math at IXL.com


What Percent of a Number Is a Number

Source: https://www.homeschoolmath.net/teaching/percent/percent_of_number_using_decimals.php

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