Sales Tax & VAT Calculator

Add sales tax or VAT to a price, or work out the tax inside a total.

$
%
Total including tax
$0
Net (excl. tax)
$0
Tax
$0
Gross (incl. tax)
$0
Effective on net
0%

Check the tax rate that applies to your country, state or product — rates and exemptions vary.

Adding and removing tax

Sales tax, VAT and GST all work the same way: a percentage of the net price is added on to make the gross price. The calculator handles both directions — building the total up from a net price, or breaking a known total back down into net and tax.

Add: gross = net × (1 + rate) · Remove: net = gross ÷ (1 + rate)

The asymmetry trips people up: adding 20% then removing 20% by subtraction does not return the original price, because each percentage is taken from a different base. Dividing by 1 plus the rate is the correct way to strip tax out.

Worked example

Adding 20% VAT to a $100 net price gives $20 of tax and a $120 total. Working backwards, a $120 gross price contains $20 of tax and $100 net — note that 20% of 100 is not the same as 20% of 120.

Net, gross and getting it right

Whether you are pricing a product, checking a receipt, or filing a return, the net/gross distinction matters. Quote a customer the gross price and your margin is on the net; reclaim tax on the net and you need the figure that was actually added, not a flat percentage of the total.

Worth keeping in mind

  • Removing tax isn't subtraction. Divide the gross by 1 plus the rate to find the net.
  • Rounding adds up. On many line items, rounding each one can differ slightly from taxing the total once.
  • Rates vary. Different products, regions and customer types can attract different rates or exemptions.

This is general information, not tax advice.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between net and gross?
Net is the price before tax; gross is the price after tax is added. "Add tax" goes from net to gross, and "remove tax" goes from gross back to net.
Why can't I just subtract the percentage to remove tax?
Because the tax was added to the smaller net figure, not the gross. To remove it you divide the gross by 1 plus the rate — for 20% that means dividing by 1.2, not subtracting 20%.
Does this work for GST and other sales taxes?
Yes. VAT, GST and US sales taxes are all a percentage added to a price, so the same maths applies — just enter the rate that applies to you.
Are tax rates the same everywhere?
No. Rates vary by country, state and sometimes by product or service, and some items are reduced-rate or exempt. Always check the rate that applies to your situation.