VAT Converter

Calculate net price, VAT amount and gross price for e-commerce, invoices and business checks.

VAT result

  • Net price: 100
  • VAT amount: 20
  • Gross price: 120

All conversion happens locally in your browser. The value you enter is not sent to a server, logged, stored, or transmitted.

How to use this tool

Enter the required values in the labeled fields. Results update in your browser and are announced for assistive technologies. Use realistic measurements and verify important outcomes before acting on them.

Formula or logic

Add VAT: gross = net × (1 + rate/100). Remove VAT: net = gross / (1 + rate/100).

Example calculation

Example: 100 net with 20% VAT gives 120 gross and 20 VAT.

Practical use and limits

This page is built for quick unit conversion checks where the calculation should be transparent and repeatable. The calculation is intentionally visible and described above so you can sanity-check the result instead of treating it as a black box.

Limit: rounding, source-unit assumptions and business-critical tolerances should still be verified. For important decisions, use this result as a planning aid and verify it against the relevant source of truth.

Last reviewed: May 29, 2026.

VAT Converter: practical guide

VAT Converter is useful when a value needs to survive a handoff between systems, countries, teams or file formats. The conversion is simple only when the source unit and target expectation are both clear.

Use it as a sanity check before sending specs, product data, engineering notes, logistics details or pricing inputs. Keep the original value nearby when precision matters.

Real examples

Specification handoff

Input: convert a supplier or marketplace value before sharing it

Result: fewer unit mismatches between teams

Calculation input

Input: normalize values before a quote, estimate or spreadsheet model

Result: cleaner downstream numbers and fewer hidden assumptions

Practical notes

  • Confirm the source unit before converting.
  • Round only for display; keep enough precision for later calculations.
  • Some conversions are context-sensitive, especially money, rates, fuel, color and date/time values.

Common mistakes

  • Mixing converted and original values without labels.
  • Rounding too early and then using the rounded result in another calculation.
  • Assuming every tool, supplier or marketplace expects the same unit format.

Frequently asked questions

Can I change the VAT rate?

Yes. The VAT rate is user-configurable.

Is this tax advice?

No. It is a calculation helper; verify tax treatment for real transactions.

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