Percentages and Percent Change · Formula reference
Percentages and Percent Change: formulas you must memorize
A printable list of every formula and identity the College Board expects you to know fluently for percentages and percent change questions on the SAT.
Why memorize when the SAT lists formulas?
The SAT Math section opens with a reference sheet that lists a handful of geometry formulas. Most students glance at it once and never look again. The reason is simple: looking up a formula mid-section costs five to ten seconds, and across the dozens of questions that need a formula, those seconds compound into a full question's worth of lost time. Memorizing every formula on this page eliminates that drag.
This page lists every formula you should have at automatic recall for Percentages and Percent Change questions, with a short note on when each one applies and which question patterns reliably use it.
The formulas
-
p% of n = (p/100) × nThis formula is the workhorse for at least one of the four percentages and percent change sub-skills ScoreReady drills. You will see it appear in the worked solutions on the topic practice page across multiple difficulty levels.
-
Percent change = (new − old) / old × 100This formula is the workhorse for at least one of the four percentages and percent change sub-skills ScoreReady drills. You will see it appear in the worked solutions on the topic practice page across multiple difficulty levels.
-
Successive multipliers compound, not addThis formula is the workhorse for at least one of the four percentages and percent change sub-skills ScoreReady drills. You will see it appear in the worked solutions on the topic practice page across multiple difficulty levels.
-
Final price after p% tax = original × (1 + p/100)This formula is the workhorse for at least one of the four percentages and percent change sub-skills ScoreReady drills. You will see it appear in the worked solutions on the topic practice page across multiple difficulty levels.
How to memorize
The fastest reliable way to memorize a small set of formulas is spaced repetition. On day one, write the formula and its trigger phrase three times each. On day two, cover the formula and recall it from the trigger phrase alone. On day four, do the same. On day eight, drill again. After four cycles spaced this way, the formulas are durable for at least six weeks — long enough to cover most SAT preparation timelines.
An equivalent method that some students prefer is to embed the formula inside a worked example. Write a single SAT-style problem that uses the formula, work it on paper end to end, then re-derive the formula from the example whenever you need it. This anchors the abstract symbols to a concrete pattern.
Common application errors
- Dividing percent change by the new value instead of the original
- Adding successive percent changes instead of multiplying their multipliers
- Confusing "p% of n" with "p% more than n"
- Using the percent value (p) instead of p/100 in a calculation
Each of these errors corresponds to a misapplication of one of the formulas above. Read the pitfalls walkthrough for a worked example of each, then drill the topic question bank with conscious attention to which pitfall each question is testing.