Stage 4 · Ratios, Proportion & Percentages

4.4  What Percentages Mean

Why a percent is just a ratio with the same partner every time — a number out of one hundred.

For ages 10–12 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 5 in this lesson: 4.4.4 Finding a given percent of a number

4.4.4 Finding a given percent of a number

The reverse situation is just as common: you know the percent and want the actual amount. "15% of 200 students," "a 20% tip on a $40 meal," "8% sales tax." The move is to turn the percent into a decimal and multiply:

part  =  whole  ×  percent   ⟶   15% of 200 = 200 × 0.15 = 30

Why multiply? Because "15% of 200" means 15 hundredths of 200, and "of" with fractions and decimals always means multiply. Writing 15% as 0.15 and multiplying does exactly that.

0 200 (100%) 15% = 30 200 × 0.15 = 30
Fifteen percent of the bar is shaded amber. Since the whole bar stands for 200, that amber slice is worth 30.

Mental shortcuts worth having

You rarely need a calculator for the friendly percents. Build the one you want from these:

10% — move the point one place left (10% of 80 = 8).
1% — move the point two places left (1% of 80 = 0.8).
50% — just halve it (50% of 80 = 40).
5% — half of 10% (5% of 80 = 4).
20% — double 10% (20% of 80 = 16); 15% = 10% + 5%.

Worked example — a restaurant tip

Leave a 20% tip on a $45 meal.
Find 10% of 45 first — move the point one place left: $4.50. Double it for 20%: $9.00. (Check by multiplying: 45 × 0.20 = 9. ✓)

🎮 Try itPercent of a number

Set a percent and a whole. The widget shades that percent of the bar and shows the arithmetic whole × percent.

Percent 15
Whole 200
eastmath.com · 4.4 What Percentages Mean · 4.4.4 Finding a given percent of a number