Percentage Guide

Can Something Decrease by More Than 100%?

Short answer: no, not in a normal percentage decrease. Long answer: this mistake is surprisingly common — and once you see why, it becomes obvious.

Updated April 2026 · 6 min read · UtilTools

The short answer

In normal situations, something cannot decrease by more than 100%. A 100% decrease means the entire original value is gone.

100 → 50 This is a 50% decrease.
100 → 0 This is a 100% decrease.
100 → -50 This is not a normal decrease anymore. The value has gone below zero.

The confusion usually starts when people use dramatic language like “prices fell by 150%” or “costs dropped by 200%.” It sounds impressive. It also usually means the math has quietly left the building.

What does a 100% decrease actually mean?

A 100% decrease means the value has fallen all the way to zero. Nothing remains of the original amount.

Example
Original value = 100
New value = 0
The entire original amount has disappeared.
= 100% decrease

Once the value reaches zero, there is nothing left to remove. You cannot remove 150% of a positive value without going below zero. At that point, you are no longer describing a standard percentage decrease — you are describing a negative value, debt, loss, or a context that needs clearer wording.

A 100% decrease is the floor for normal positive values. It is the “we are out of cake” point. You cannot be 150% out of cake unless someone now owes cake to the universe.

The percentage decrease formula

Percentage decrease compares how much a value has fallen relative to the original value. The original value is the base.

Formula
Decrease % = (Original − New) ÷ Original × 100
Example: Original = 100, New = 25
(100 − 25) ÷ 100 × 100
= 75% decrease

Notice that the original value is in the denominator. That is why the calculation is anchored to the starting point. The decrease tells you how much of the original value disappeared.

If all of the original value disappears, that is 100%. If more than all of it disappears, the new value must be below zero.

What would a decrease greater than 100% mean?

Let us try to force a 150% decrease from an original value of 100.

Forced example
(100 − New) ÷ 100 × 100 = 150
100 − New = 150
New = -50
A 150% decrease requires the new value to be -50.

That is the key point. A decrease greater than 100% means the new value has gone below zero. For many real-world things, that does not make sense.

Context Can it go below zero? Does 100%+ decrease make sense?
Price of a product Usually no No
Number of customers No No
Inventory count No No
Profit Yes, it can become a loss Needs careful wording
Bank balance Yes, it can become debt Possible, but context matters

In finance, negative values can exist. A company can move from profit to loss. A bank account can go into overdraft. But even there, saying “decreased by 150%” may be less clear than saying “moved from a profit of 100 to a loss of 50.”

Why increases can exceed 100%, but decreases usually cannot

This is where many people get caught. Percentage increases and decreases do not behave symmetrically.

100 → 200 This is a 100% increase.
100 → 300 This is a 200% increase.
100 → 0 This is the maximum normal decrease: 100%.

A value can grow without an upper limit. It can double, triple, or increase tenfold. But if you are starting with a positive value and measuring a normal decrease, the lowest it can go is zero.

Simple rule

Percentage increases can go above 100%. Percentage decreases are normally capped at 100%.

Real examples

Example 1: A product price

A product costs $100 and is discounted to $0. That is a 100% decrease. The store cannot discount it by 150% unless they start paying you $50 to take it, which would be less of a sale and more of a cry for help from inventory management.

Calculation
(100 − 0) ÷ 100 × 100
= 100% decrease

Example 2: Website traffic

If a website drops from 10,000 visitors to 0 visitors, traffic decreased by 100%. It cannot have negative visitors. Ghost traffic does not count, even if your analytics dashboard feels haunted.

Example 3: Profit turning into loss

Suppose a business moves from a profit of $100,000 to a loss of $50,000. Mathematically, you can calculate a change greater than 100%, but it is often clearer to describe it directly: “The company moved from a $100,000 profit to a $50,000 loss.”

In that kind of situation, the negative value changes the interpretation. It is no longer just a normal decrease within a positive range.

Common mistakes

Saying “decreased by 200%” when you mean “decreased a lot”

Dramatic wording is not the same as correct math. A normal positive value cannot decrease by 200%.

Confusing absolute change with percentage change

Dropping by 200 units is not the same as dropping by 200%.

Ignoring the original value

Percentage decrease is always measured relative to the original value.

Using the wrong direction

From 100 to 50 is a 50% decrease. From 50 to 100 is a 100% increase. These are not symmetrical.

Calculate percentage decrease correctly

Use our free calculators to check decreases, increases and general percentage problems.

The practical rule

For normal positive values, the maximum percentage decrease is 100%.

If a calculation gives you a decrease greater than 100%, stop and check the context. You may be dealing with a negative value, a profit-to-loss situation, debt, or simply wording that needs to be clearer.

Best wording

Instead of saying “decreased by more than 100%,” explain the actual change: “It went from 100 to -50,” or “it moved from profit to loss.”

Frequently asked questions

Can something decrease by more than 100%?

Usually no. For normal positive values, a 100% decrease means the value has reached zero. A decrease greater than 100% would require the new value to be below zero.

Can a percentage increase be more than 100%?

Yes. Increases can exceed 100% because values can grow beyond the original amount. For example, going from 100 to 300 is a 200% increase.

What does a 100% decrease mean?

It means the full original value is gone. For example, going from 100 to 0 is a 100% decrease.

Why do people say “200% decrease”?

Usually because they are using dramatic language, confusing absolute change with percentage change, or describing a situation where the value went below zero.

What if profit becomes a loss?

Then the value has crossed below zero. You can calculate the mathematical change, but it is often clearer to describe the actual movement from profit to loss.