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Invoice Discount Calculator

Run any discount three ways — straight percentage off, a flat amount off, or a 2/10 net 30 early payment offer — and copy the exact wording into your invoice.

Percentage off, flat amount off, or early payment terms 2/10 net 30 with annualized return shown Copy-ready invoice line in every mode
Discount type

Apply a straight percentage discount to the original amount.

Result

Discount amount
$100.00
New total
$900.00
You saved $100.00 (10% off).
Preview:

Discount (10% off): -$100.00. New total: $900.00.

For guidance only — not legal or financial advice. Discount terms (percentage, window, and net date) should be in writing on the invoice or contract before the work is delivered, otherwise they may not be enforceable.

What this discount calculator does for you

Discounts only work when the math is clear on the invoice. This tool removes the back-of-envelope guesswork so you can quote a clean number — and a clean line — every time.

3 modes

Covers every common case

Percentage off, flat dollar amount off, and early payment discounts (2/10 net 30 style) — switch between them with one tap.

36.5%

Sees the hidden APR

Standard 2/10 net 30 terms are equivalent to a 36.5% annualized return for the client. The calculator shows that number so you can sell the discount honestly.

30 sec

From offer to invoice line

Type the original amount, set the discount, and copy the wording straight into the invoice or the email reply.

Why most freelancers price discounts badly

Discounting feels generous, but vague discounting silently eats your margin. Here's where it usually goes wrong.

  • You eyeball the percentage. A "round it down to $900" instinct on a $980 invoice looks small until you realise it's an 8% cut, not the 2% you intended.
  • Stacked discounts compound the wrong way. Two 25% discounts don't equal 50% off — they equal 43.75% off. A calculator that does one mode at a time forces you to be honest about what's actually applied.
  • Early payment terms get misquoted. "2/10 net 30" is industry shorthand, not plain English. Pasting it on an invoice without explaining the dollar amount means most clients ignore it entirely.
  • The discount becomes the new ceiling. A discount you offer once is a price the client expects forever. Pricing the offer correctly the first time keeps you from having to renegotiate later.

Everything this discount calculator handles

Three discount modes that match how clients actually ask for a deal — plus the wording you'll paste into the invoice.

Straight percentage off

Enter the original amount and a discount percentage. See the exact discount value and the new total, plus a one-line summary you can drop into the invoice.

Flat amount off

Knocking $50 off a project? The calculator shows the new total and the equivalent percent so you understand the real concession you're making.

Early payment (2/10 net 30 and friends)

Set the early discount, the early window, and the standard net days. The result includes the annualized return — so the client sees why paying early is worth it.

Multi-currency, copy-ready line

USD, EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, JPY, and CNY format natively via Intl. The suggested invoice line is tailored to the mode you're in.

How to calculate a discount on an invoice

Three quick inputs, three clean outputs.

  1. Step 1

    Pick the discount type

    Choose percentage off, flat amount off, or early payment. The form adapts to what each mode actually needs.

  2. Step 2

    Enter the numbers

    Type the original amount, the discount value, and (for early payment) the days window and net terms. Everything recalculates as you type.

  3. Step 3

    Copy the invoice line

    Hit copy to grab the wording — "Pay within 10 days for 2% off: $980.00 — saves $20.00" — and paste it straight into the invoice or follow-up email.

Why use an invoice discount calculator instead of mental math

An invoice discount calculator removes the two mistakes that quietly drain freelancer margins: rounding errors and unclear wording. When a client asks for "10% off" on a $1,287 project, the difference between calculating it correctly ($128.70) and "calling it $150" is real money. Multiply that across a year of invoices and the gap can swallow a month of work.

The same logic applies to early payment discounts and flat rebates. A flat $50 off looks small on an $800 invoice — until you notice it's actually a 6.25% discount, three times what a typical prompt payment offer costs. Seeing the equivalent percentage as you type stops you from giving away more than you intended.

The math behind 2/10 net 30 (and why it's effectively 36.5% APR)

The shorthand 2/10 net 30 means: 2% off if paid within 10 days, otherwise the full balance is due in 30 days. The discount looks tiny — it's just two percent — but it's spread over a 20-day window (the gap between the discount cutoff and the standard due date). Annualize that and the picture changes:

  • 2% earned on a 20-day acceleration
  • 365 days ÷ 20 days = 18.25 cycles per year
  • Effective discount of 2% ÷ 98% = 2.041% per cycle
  • 2.041% × 18.25 ≈ 37.2% annualized return

Most finance textbooks round this to 36.5% APR, and that's the number you'll see in the early payment mode of this calculator. For your client, it's a screaming-good return — far better than parking cash in a money market account. For you, it's the cost of getting paid faster, so price the offer with eyes open.

How to word an early payment discount on the invoice

Industry shorthand like 2/10 net 30 is meaningless to roughly half the clients who'll see it. The wording that actually moves money is concrete and dated:

Pay within 10 days for 2% off: $980.00 — saves $20.00. Otherwise net 30: $1,000.00.

That single line does three things. It states the dollar amount the client actually pays, it shows the savings as a number rather than a percentage, and it sets a clear deadline. Pair it with an "issued" date at the top of the invoice and there's no ambiguity about when the early window closes.

For straight percentage discounts and flat rebates, the same principle applies — show the discount as a negative line item, then the new total. Buried in a paragraph of payment terms, a discount tends to be ignored. Broken out as its own line, it gets seen.

When a discount actually helps — and when it hurts

Discounts are a tactic, not a strategy. They work in three specific situations:

  • Cash flow is tight and a 2% haircut is cheaper than a credit line. This is the case for early payment discounts; you're effectively buying liquidity at the spread between the discount and your borrowing rate.
  • You're closing a large recurring engagement. A 5% discount on a six-month retainer can outperform full price on a one-off project, especially when client acquisition cost is high.
  • You're clearing inventory or capacity. A flat amount off the last seat in a workshop or the last available month of the quarter monetizes capacity that would otherwise expire.

Where discounts hurt is the slow grind of "race to the bottom" pricing. Anchoring on a discounted rate makes future price increases harder to justify, and clients have long memories. If you find yourself discounting every invoice, the problem is the original price, not the discount.

Common discount formats this calculator supports

  • Percentage off — the universal default. Enter any rate from 1% to 99% and the calculator shows the discount amount and new total.
  • Flat amount off — useful for round-number gestures or for matching a competitor's quote without revealing your full pricing logic.
  • Early payment discounts — 2/10 net 30 is the most common, but 1/10 net 30, 2/15 net 60, and 3/10 net 45 all use the same calculator. Just change the inputs.
  • Loyalty / volume / multi-item discounts — these all reduce to one of the three modes above. A "buy 5 hours, get 1 free" offer is a 16.67% percentage discount; a "$100 off your second project" is a flat amount off the new invoice.

Accounting and tax handling for discounts

In most jurisdictions, a sales discount reduces the invoice's net revenue rather than counting as a separate expense. That matters for two reasons. First, sales tax (or VAT, GST) is calculated on the discounted amount, so a 10% discount lowers the tax owed proportionally. Second, your reported revenue for the period drops by the discount amount, which changes how your year-over-year growth reads.

Cash-basis bookkeepers record the discount when payment is received. Accrual-basis bookkeepers split it: the original invoice is booked at full value, and the discount is recorded as a contra-revenue entry on the day it's taken. Either way, keep a paper trail — the discount terms should appear on the invoice, the email confirming the offer, and the deposit record. Your accountant will thank you at year end.

A note on enforceability

Discount terms — whether percentage off, flat off, or early payment — only stick when they're documented before the work is delivered. A discount mentioned over text after the invoice goes out is a goodwill gesture, not a contractual term. Build the discount language into your standard invoice template and your engagement letter, and the calculator becomes a pricing tool rather than a damage-control one.

Frequently asked questions

What does 2/10 net 30 mean on an invoice?
2/10 net 30 means the client gets a 2% discount if the invoice is paid within 10 days of the invoice date. If they don't pay within that window, the full amount is due in 30 days. So a $1,000 invoice with 2/10 net 30 can be settled for $980 in the first 10 days, or $1,000 by day 30.
How do I calculate 10% off an amount?
Multiply the original amount by 0.10 (or divide by 10) to get the discount, then subtract it from the original. On a $500 invoice, 10% off is $50, which means the new total is $450. The percentage-off mode in this calculator does the math automatically and shows the exact wording to paste into the invoice.
Should I offer an early payment discount as a freelancer?
Only if cash flow matters more to you than the 1–2% you give up. Standard 2/10 net 30 terms cost you 2% but get you paid 20 days earlier on average. That's roughly a 36.5% annualized return for the client — which is why it works as an incentive — but for you it's a genuine cost. Offer it to clients who consistently delay, not to clients who already pay on time.
What is the difference between a loyalty discount and a volume discount?
A loyalty discount rewards repeat business — a returning client gets, say, 10% off their next project. A volume discount rewards size — a 100-hour package costs less per hour than a 20-hour one. They can be combined, but they answer different questions: loyalty is about retention, volume is about expansion.
How do I word a discount on an invoice?
Be explicit about the dollar amount, the percentage, and the condition. Examples: "Discount (10% off): -$100.00. New total: $900.00." Or for early payment: "Pay within 10 days for 2% off: $980.00. Otherwise net 30: $1,000.00." The copy-ready line in this calculator follows that pattern in every mode.
Is a 2/10 net 30 discount really worth 36.5% APR?
Yes — for the client. The math: a 2% discount earned by paying 20 days early works out to (2 ÷ 98) × (365 ÷ 20) = roughly 37% annualized. That's why finance textbooks call early payment discounts an attractive opportunity for any client with idle cash. For you as the seller, the same 2% is a straight cost of capital, so price it accordingly.
Can I stack a percentage discount and a flat discount?
Technically yes, but it muddies the math. Two 20% discounts stacked are not 40% off — they're 36% off, because the second 20% applies to the already-reduced price. If you need to combine offers, calculate them one at a time and write them as separate line items so the client (and your accountant) can audit the math.
How do discounts affect my taxes and bookkeeping?
In most accounting setups, a discount reduces revenue rather than counting as an expense. On the invoice, the discount appears as a negative line item before tax is calculated, so sales tax (or VAT/GST) is computed on the net amount, not the gross. Check with your local accountant — rules differ between cash and accrual accounting and between countries.

Issue the discounted invoice in two minutes

Once you've priced the discount, generate a clean invoice with the new total in InvoiceCat — free, no signup, downloadable as PDF.

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