Percentage Points vs Percent: What’s the Difference?
Why a move from 10% to 12% is 2 percentage points but a 20% relative increase — and why the distinction matters.
Want to crunch a percentage right now?
Open the Percentage Calculator →More percentage guides
Frequently asked questions
What is a percentage point?
A percentage point is the plain difference between two percentages. Going from 10% to 12% is a rise of 2 percentage points.
What is the difference between a percent and a percentage point?
Percentage points are the arithmetic gap between two percentages; a percent change expresses that gap relative to the starting value. 10% to 12% is +2 percentage points but +20% in relative terms.
Why does this distinction matter?
It changes the meaning of a statistic. An interest rate moving from 4% to 5% is 1 percentage point, but 25% higher — confusing the two can seriously misstate the size of a change.
Percentage Points vs Percent: What’s the Difference?
Percentage points and percentages are easy to confuse, and mixing them up can make a small change sound huge — or hide a big one. Here is the clear distinction.
The key idea
A percentage point is the simple arithmetic gap between two percentages. A percent change is that gap relative to the starting percentage.
| From → To | In percentage points | In percent (relative) |
|---|---|---|
| 10% → 12% | +2 percentage points | +20% |
| 4% → 5% | +1 percentage point | +25% |
| 50% → 40% | −10 percentage points | −20% |
Why it matters
When a central bank lifts an interest rate from 4% to 5%, that is a 1 percentage‑point rise — but a 25% increase in the rate itself. News reports, poll results and tax changes all rely on this distinction; saying “1%” when you mean “1 percentage point” can be off by a wide margin.
A quick rule
If you are subtracting two percentages, the answer is in percentage points. If you are dividing the change by the original percentage, the answer is a percent.
Results are estimates for general guidance in United Arab Emirates and may not reflect the latest local rates, fees or rules. Check official sources before making decisions.