15% of 500 is 75. If you need a fast, reliable way to get there (and to verify it), this page walks through the simple mental split that fits 500 perfectly, then gives you a calculator and examples you can map to real costs and totals.
You’ll run into 15% on discounts, service charges, and commissions. With a base of 500, the 15% portion is 75 — large enough to change a decision, but still easy to compute without a calculator because 10% and 5% are both clean steps on this number.
Rather than giving only a one-line result, this page shows a method you can reuse instantly. Once you can do 15% of 500, it becomes much easier to sense-check nearby totals too, such as 15% of 450 or 15% of 550.
If you were taking 15% off a price of 500, the saving would be 75 and the remaining amount would be 425. That “75 swing” is often the part you care about when comparing offers or checking a fee on a round total.
Use the calculator below to change the percentage or the number and instantly solve a different percentage-of-number problem.
Formula used: (percentage ÷ 100) × number
The result of 75 means fifteen parts out of every hundred parts of 500. In plain terms, it is the share of the total represented by a 15% rate. If you are calculating a discount, then 75 is the amount taken off. If you are calculating a fee, then 75 is the amount charged. If you are allocating part of a budget, then 75 is the amount assigned.
On a base of 500, 75 is big enough to notice immediately. It’s the difference between a £500 bill and a £425 bill after a 15% reduction, or the difference between a £500 payout and £425 received after a 15% platform fee. Because the result is a whole number, you can usually check it quickly without any rounding.
Step 1: Take 10% of 500. That gives 50.
Step 2: Take 5% of 500 by halving 50. That gives 25.
Full formula: (15 ÷ 100) × 500 = 75
Add the parts for 15%: 50 + 25 = 75. This breakdown is especially clean on 500 because “ten percent” and “half of ten percent” are both round numbers.
The easiest way to estimate 15% mentally is to split it into 10% + 5%. For 500, 10% is 50 and 5% is 25. Add them together and you get 75. This shortcut is especially useful when you need a fast estimate without reaching for a calculator.
In real life, 15% comes up often enough that learning this shortcut pays off. It can help you sense-check restaurant tips, promotional discounts, fee percentages, or how much of a budget should be reserved for a particular category.
Whenever you see 15%, think “ten percent plus five percent.” It is one of the fastest and most reliable percentage shortcuts, and it works well for prices, fees, savings targets, and everyday estimates.
Example 1: Discount
If an item costs £500 and the discount is 15%, the saving is £75. The discounted price would be £425.
Example 2: Budgeting
If you set aside 15% of 500 for tax, savings, marketing, or overheads, the amount allocated would be 75.
15% of 500 is 75.
Take 10% of 500 (50) and add 5% of 500 (25). That totals 75.
Find 10% of 500 first, which is 50, then add 5%, which is 25. That gives 75.