Profit Loss Tricks

πŸ”– One-Look Formulae

  • Profit = SP – CP  (SP > CP)
  • Loss = CP – SP  (CP > SP)
  • Profit % = (Profit/CP) Γ— 100
  • Loss % = (Loss/CP) Γ— 100
  • SP = CP Γ— (100 Β± P/L%) ⁄ 100  (+ profit, – loss)
  • CP = SP Γ— 100 ⁄ (100 Β± P/L%)
  • Net % Profit/Loss when two articles sold at same SP & same % P/L β†’ Always Loss % = (Common %)²⁄100

🧠 Memory Tricks

Situation Trick
Same SP, same % P & L β€œSquare the % & divide by 100 β†’ Loss”
False weight shopkeeper Gain % = (Error ⁄ True weight) Γ— 100
Two successive profits Use a + b + ab⁄100 (same for loss with –ve sign)
Discount chain 10% + 20% Single discount = 10 + 20 – (10Γ—20)/100 = 28%

πŸ“Š Quick Table

Given Find Formula (in mind)
CP & P% SP CP Γ— (100 + P%) / 100
CP & L% SP CP Γ— (100 – L%) / 100
SP & P% CP SP Γ— 100 / (100 + P%)
SP & L% CP SP Γ— 100 / (100 – L%)

⚑ Special Cases

  • Marked Price β†’ Discount β†’ SP
    SP = MP Γ— (100 – D%) ⁄ 100
    Profit on CP β†’ CP = SP Γ— 100 ⁄ (100 + P%)

  • False weight 900 g instead of 1 kg
    Gain % = (100 g ⁄ 900 g) Γ— 100 = 11 1⁄9 %

  • Article sold at x% profit, had it been sold for β‚Ήy more, profit would be z%
    CP = y Γ— 100 ⁄ (z – x)

πŸš€ Rapid-Fire MCQs

Q1. A shopkeeper marks 40% above CP and gives 15% discount. Net profit % is Ans: 19%
Q2. Two articles sold at same price, one at 20% profit, other at 20% loss. Net result? Ans: 4% loss
Q3. CP of 12 apples equals SP of 15 apples. Loss % is Ans: 20%
Q4. After 20% discount, still 20% profit on CP. Mark-up % on CP was Ans: 50%
Q5. 900 g sold for 1 kg. Gain % is Ans: 11 1⁄9 %
Q6. Successive discounts 10% & 20% single equivalent discount is Ans: 28%
Q7. SP = β‚Ή120, Profit = 20%. CP is Ans: β‚Ή100
Q8. SP = β‚Ή120, Loss = 20%. CP is Ans: β‚Ή150
Q9. On selling 5 pens, gain equals SP of 2 pens. Profit % is Ans: 66 2⁄3 %
Q10. If profit doubles when SP is increased by 25%, original profit % is Ans: 25%