What is 30% of 1,200?

30% of 1,200 equals

360

30% of 1,200 Calculator

Result
360

Try a related calculation:

30% of 1,200 is 360. The calculator below lets you change the percentage or base number and see the answer instantly.

This page shows the exact math behind 30% of 1,200, how to work it out by hand in three short steps, the value in different forms (decimal, fraction, money), and nearby percentage values you can compare against.

How to calculate 30% of 1,200

Formula

(30 ÷ 100) × 1200 = 360

The percentage formula is the same every time: divide the percentage by 100, then multiply by the base number.

  1. Convert 30% to a decimal. Divide by 100: 30 ÷ 100 = 0.3
  2. Multiply by 1,200.

    Working

    0.3 × 1200 = 360

  3. Use the exact answer, or round only at the end if needed.

The two-step approach — convert, then multiply — works for any percentage and any base, including decimals and percentages over 100. Skipping the divide-by-100 step is the single most common error and gives an answer that is exactly 100 times too large.

Mental shortcut

Find 10% of 1,200 (move the decimal one place left to get 120). Multiply by 3 to get 360.

30% of 1,200 vs 30% off 1,200

These two phrases sound similar but give different answers. 30% of 1,200 gives the percentage amount on its own: 360. 30% off 1,200 means subtracting that amount from 1,200, which leaves 840 (about 840.00 for money).

Worked side by side: “of” is just the product (30 ÷ 100) × 1200 = 360. “Off” subtracts that product from the original: 1200 − 360 = 840. Sales listings sometimes use either phrasing, so always check which one matches what you actually need.

30% of 1,200 in different forms

The same answer can be written several ways. Each form is useful in a different setting — decimals for calculators, fractions for algebra, money rounding for invoices, and proportions for word problems.

FormExpressionValue
Decimal0.3 × 1200360
Fraction(3/10) × 1200360
Rounded (money)nearest cent360.00
Proportion30 : 100 = x : 1200x = 360

Use the fraction form when you need an exact, never-rounded representation. Use the money form when the result will appear on a price, receipt, or invoice. Use the proportion form when you want to scale the same percentage to a different base.

Nearby percentage values for 1,200

This table holds 1,200 as the base and varies the percentage. The highlighted row is the calculation on this page. Each row is computed exactly using the same formula.

Percentof 1,200Rounded (money)Explanation
20%240240.0010 below 30%
25%300300.005 below 30%
30%360360.00This page
35%420420.005 above 30%
40%480480.0010 above 30%

Use this table for quick estimation. If your target percentage sits between two rows, the answer for 1,200 will sit between the two values shown — percentage of a fixed base scales linearly.

Common mistakes to avoid

These are the four mistakes that most often turn a correct percentage problem into a wrong answer. Each one has a quick fix.

  • Multiplying by 30 instead of the decimal form 0.3. That would give 36000 — 100 times the correct answer.
  • Mixing up “of” and “off”. 30% of 1,200 is 360. 30% off 1,200 is 840.
  • Rounding too early. If you round during a multi-step calculation, the final answer can drift. Round only at the end.
  • Trusting the calculator’s % key blindly. Different calculators handle that key differently. The safe method is to convert 30% to 0.3 yourself, then multiply.

Related percentage calculations

For an all-in-one tool, visit the main percentage calculator.

Frequently asked questions

What is 30% of 1,200?

30% of 1,200 is 360. For money, that rounds to 360.00.

How do you calculate 30% of 1,200 by hand?

Convert 30% to 0.3 (divide by 100), then multiply by 1,200. The result is 360.

What is 30% off 1,200?

30% off 1,200 means subtracting 360 from 1,200, which leaves 840.

How is 30% of 1,200 written as a fraction?

30% equals 3/10, so 3/10 of 1,200 works out to 360.

Can 30% of 1,200 be calculated mentally?

Yes. 10% of 1,200 is 120; multiply by 3 to get 360.

When should I use the exact answer vs the rounded answer?

Use the exact answer (360) when the result feeds into another calculation. Use the rounded answer (360.00) only for display, like a money amount on a receipt.

Does the same formula work for any percentage and any base number?

Yes. The formula (P ÷ 100) × N gives the percentage amount for any values. For this page, (30 ÷ 100) × 1,200 = 360.