20% of 2000 is 400. Two thousand is a round base that splits evenly into five equal parts, so the twenty-percent share is a clean integer: 2000 ÷ 5 = 400. That size of slice shows up when someone quotes a deposit, a monthly chunk of an annual figure, a campaign test budget, or a stock reorder line—anywhere “one fifth of two thousand” is the share you need to isolate.
Another fast route: 10% of 2000 is 200, and doubling gives 400. Or build from thousands: twenty percent of 1000 is 200, and 2 × 200 = 400 because 2000 is two thousands. If you compared against fifteen points first, 15% of 2000 is 300; moving to twenty adds 100 to that portion.
“20% off” on £2000 means £400 off and a sale subtotal of £1600 before other charges. If the question was only “what is 20% of 2000,” the answer stays 400; keep 1600 for “after the discount” wording.
Everything below repeats the same three numbers—2000, 20%, 400—so you can verify a single cell or explain the logic without generic filler.
One fifth of 2000 is 400. On the same rate, 20% of 1750 is 350—two hundred fifty less in the base removes fifty from the fifth.
Change either value below to solve another percentage-of-number question instantly.
Formula used: (percentage ÷ 100) × number
Method A (one fifth): 2000 ÷ 5 = 400.
Method B (decimal): 0.20 × 2000 = 400.
Method C (from 10%): 200 × 2 = 400.
Full formula: (20 ÷ 100) × 2000 = 400. For a quarter of the same base instead of a fifth, 25% of 2000 is 500—a useful neighbour when you are comparing “one in four” with “one in five” on the same two thousand.
The ratio 400 : 2000 simplifies to 1 : 5, so the twenty-percent line is exactly one part in five of the whole. Twenty “hundreds” each contribute 20 at a 20% rate, and 20 × 20 = 400, matching the fifth and the decimal multiplication.
Scaling check: twenty percent of 4000 is 800; halving both base and portion returns 2000 and 400. That pair of halvings is a quick trap detector when a spreadsheet doubled an input by mistake.
Pick the line that fits how you already think about the number:
All three stay in whole numbers on this page, which makes them easy to say aloud in a meeting or on a call while someone else reads the total back.
Example 1: 20% discount on a £2000 bike
The saving is £400 and the promotional subtotal is £1600 before delivery or add-ons.
Example 2: 20% of a £2000 monthly retainer cap
Pass-through or contingency at twenty percent of the cap is £400, leaving £1600 for core delivery if the limit stays fixed at 2000.
Example 3: Fee on a payment of 2000
A 20% platform fee on 2000 takes 400; the remainder after removing only that fee is 1600.
Example 4: Time from 2000 minutes
Twenty percent of 2000 minutes is 400 minutes—six hours and forty minutes from a block counted in minutes (2000 min ≈ 33 h 20 min).
20% of 2000 is 400.
Divide 2000 by 5 to get 400, multiply 2000 by 0.20, or double 10% of 2000 (200 + 200).
Subtract the 20% amount of 400 from 2000; the remaining total is 1600.