Percentage difference between 151.13 and 150.00
How to calculate
Real-world examples
The percentage difference between $151.13 and $150.00 is 0.75%.
Two products priced at $151.13 and $150.00 differ by 0.75%.
Scores of 151.13 and 150.00 have a 0.75% difference.
What is the percentage difference between 151.13 and 150.00?
The percentage difference between 151.13 and 150.00 is 0.75%. Percentage difference measures how far apart two values are relative to their average, treating both values equally. The formula is: % Difference = (|A − B| ÷ ((A + B) ÷ 2)) × 100, which gives (1.13 ÷ 150.57) × 100 = 0.75%.
What is percentage difference?
Percentage difference measures how far apart two values are, relative to their average. Unlike percentage change (which has a direction — from old to new), percentage difference treats both values equally. The percentage difference between 151.13 and 150.00 is 0.75%.
This is useful when comparing two values that don't have a clear before/after relationship — for example, comparing prices of two products, scores of two teams, or measurements from two different sources.
How to calculate percentage difference — step by step
- Find the absolute difference: |151.13 − 150.00| = 1.13
- Find the average of the two values: (151.13 + 150.00) ÷ 2 = 150.57
- Divide the difference by the average: 1.13 ÷ 150.57 = 0.0075
- Multiply by 100: 0.0075 × 100 = 0.75%
% Difference = (|A − B| ÷ ((A + B) ÷ 2)) × 100
The formula uses the average as the reference point because neither value is the "base." This makes the calculation symmetric — the percentage difference between 151.13 and 150.00 is the same as between 150.00 and 151.13.
Percentage difference vs. percentage change
These are two different concepts that people often confuse:
| Feature | % Difference | % Change |
|---|---|---|
| Direction | Symmetric (no direction) | Directional (old → new) |
| Reference | Average of both values | Original value only |
| Sign | Always positive | Positive (increase) or negative (decrease) |
| Best for | Comparing two independent values | Measuring growth or decline |
When to use percentage difference
- ●Product comparisons: Comparing prices of two competing products, where neither is the "original."
- ●Scientific measurements: Comparing two experimental results or a result with an expected value.
- ●Salary comparisons: Comparing two salaries for the same role at different companies.
- ●Performance benchmarks: Comparing two athletes, two schools, or two regions on the same metric.
Tips & tricks
- ●Percentage difference is always positive — it's about magnitude, not direction.
- ●It uses the average of the two values as the reference point.
- ●Different from percentage change, which uses the original as the reference.
- ●US sales tax ranges from 0% (Oregon) to over 10% (some cities).
- ●A standard restaurant tip in the US is 15–20%.