Tip calculator
ClientRestaurant-style tip math with optional split—total, tip amount, and each person's share.
How to use
Enter bill|tipPercent|people separated by pipes.
About Tip calculator
Compute tip and per-person totals from bill, tip rate, and party size—browser-only. The interactive transform on this page runs in your browser tab—Toolcore does not need your paste for the core operation described above.
How to use this page
Paste or type in the main workspace, run the primary action from the toolbar, then copy or download the result. Use Load example when the page offers it, or URL prefill (?q= / ?qb=) so agents and tickets open the same input.
Tip (18%): 18.00 Total with tip: 118.00 Per person (2): 59.00
Nearby workflows on Toolcore
- VAT calculator — Compute VAT inclusive or exclusive amounts from net price and rate—browser-only. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
- Markup percent calculator — Selling price and profit from cost and markup percentage. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
- Reverse percentage — Given a final amount after a percent increase or decrease, find the original—local percent algebra. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
- Percentage point change — Difference between two percentages in points—not relative percent change—local. when units or numeric output should be checked on a related calculator.
Common use cases
- Split a dinner bill with 20% tip across four people.
- Compare tip amounts before paying.
Common mistakes to avoid
Tip on pre-tax bill
This tool tips the bill amount you enter—tax inclusion is up to you.
FAQ
Default party size?
1 if you omit the third value.
More tools
Related utilities you can open in another tab—mostly client-side.
VAT calculator
ClientCompute VAT inclusive or exclusive amounts from net price and rate—browser-only.
Markup percent calculator
ClientSelling price and profit from cost and markup percentage.
Reverse percentage
ClientGiven a final amount after a percent increase or decrease, find the original—local percent algebra.
Percentage point change
ClientDifference between two percentages in points—not relative percent change—local.