DaSpungie 1 Posted February 17, 2009 HI I used to be able to do this but math 11 is better that 27 years ago in the great land of canada we got the gst at present it is 5% now the question is how do I figure the tax amount and the pretax amount from just having the after tax amount on a receipt ? ei. x+5%=20.67 i need to know x see some wise people up here just let their machine pump out reciepts but do not give the break down. and this could mean up to $100-200 buck for good old spungie as well as paying less tax and keeping more of the gst I collect through my business. So please all you smart engineers and closet rocket scientist could you help a poor guy out Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rambler 1-1 9 Posted February 17, 2009 (edited) After tax price/1.05 = cost of item before tax. (with GST at 5%), because the tax is 5%, ie 0.05 of the price, and so the price with tax = price x 1.05. Rocket scientist? smart engineer? HA. try "Grade 10 math stooge". Edited February 17, 2009 by Rambler 1-1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+Fates 63 Posted February 17, 2009 120.50 .05 × -------------------------- 6.025 = 120.50 + -------------------------- 126.525 = 1.05 ÷ -------------------------- 120.5 = Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DaSpungie 1 Posted February 17, 2009 ya tried all those sulutions closest i get is after tax total x.95237 = before tax amount before tax subtracted from total = amount of tax i get within 2 cents on 1300 dollars the take 5% off and then add iot back leaves an error of 6 cents per 20 dollars adds up in a hurry thanks for the help Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rangerdog 0 Posted February 19, 2009 (edited) One way to look at it: i.e. x+5%=20.67 means 105% of some amount (math-heads have to call it "x") is 20.67 dividing 20.67 by 105 = .1969 (or 1/105th of 20.67) Multiply .1969 by 100 = 19.69 (we have "solved for x") Subtract 19.69 from 20.67 = .98 tax as a check, divide .98 tax by 19.69 price = .04977 (pretty close to 5%) It would be a snap to set up an excel spreadsheet and let "Bill" do the work. Edited February 19, 2009 by Rangerdog Share this post Link to post Share on other sites