Mathematics • Year 10 • Unit 1 • Lesson 4

Discounts, Mark-ups & Best Buys — Skill Drill

Build fluency with the three retail tools from Lesson 4: single discount (Sale = Original × (1 − d)), mark-up (Selling = Cost × (1 + m)), and unit price (Total ÷ Quantity). One step at a time — fully worked example, guided practice, then independent problems.

Build · I Do / We Do / You Do

1. I do — fully worked example

Read every line. Each step has a short reason on the right so you can see why, not just what.

Problem. A pair of running shoes originally costs $180. During a sale they are reduced by 25%. Find the sale price.

Step 1 — Spot the rule.

A percentage off the original price → discount formula.

Reason: Sale Price = Original Price × (1 − discount as decimal). Or work out the discount amount and subtract.

Step 2 — Convert the discount to a decimal.

25% = 25 ÷ 100 = 0.25

Reason: always work with decimals, not raw percentages, in the formula.

Step 3 — Find the multiplier "what's left after the discount".

Remaining fraction = 1 − 0.25 = 0.75

Reason: if you take off 25%, then 75% remains. That's your multiplier.

Step 4 — Multiply the original price by the remaining fraction.

Sale price = $180 × 0.75 = $135

Reason: this is the "one-step shortcut" instead of finding the discount and subtracting.

Step 5 — Check by computing the discount amount and subtracting.

Discount = $180 × 0.25 = $45. Sale = $180 − $45 = $135 ✓

Reason: same answer — confirms our shortcut is right.

Answer: The sale price is $135.00.

Stuck? Revisit lesson § "Percentage Discounts and Mark-ups" — Worked Example 1.

2. We do — fill in the missing steps

Same structure as Section 1, but with the working faded. Fill in each blank. 4 marks

Problem. Cereal A costs $5.40 for 450g. Cereal B costs $7.20 for 600g. Which cereal is the better buy?

Step 1 — Spot the rule: different-sized packages → use ________________ price to compare fairly.

Step 2 — Convert each weight to "per 100g" units:

A: 450g ÷ 100 = ______ units of 100g

B: 600g ÷ 100 = ______ units of 100g

Step 3 — Calculate each unit price (price ÷ quantity in units):

A: $5.40 ÷ ______ = $______ per 100g

B: $7.20 ÷ ______ = $______ per 100g

Step 4 — Compare. The better buy is the one with the lower unit price:

Cereal ______ is the better buy (or they are equal if the prices match).

Step 5 — State the answer in a sentence:

________________________________________________________

Stuck? Revisit lesson § "Finding the Best Buy with Unit Pricing" — Worked Example 4.

3. You do — independent practice

Show your working in the space under each problem. The first four are foundation (single rule). The middle two are standard (two-step). The last two are extension (multi-step including successive discounts).

Foundation — single rule

3.1 A bike originally costs $480. It is reduced by 15%. Find the sale price.    1 mark

3.2 A shop buys headphones for $45 and marks them up by 80%. Find the selling price.    1 mark

3.3 A 2-litre bottle of detergent costs $8.40. Find the unit price per litre.    1 mark

3.4 A jacket marked $200 has a 35% discount applied. Find the discount amount in dollars.    1 mark

Standard — combine two ideas

3.5 A retailer buys a jacket for $60 and applies a 65% mark-up. Find the selling price.    2 marks

3.6 Detergent X costs $8.40 for 2 litres. Detergent Y costs $11.25 for 2.5 litres. Which is the better buy?    2 marks

Extension — push your thinking

3.7 A television originally priced at $1,200 is reduced by 20%, then a further 15% is taken off the sale price. Find the final price after both discounts.    3 marks

3.8 A retailer buys a phone for $480 cost price and wants a selling price of $720. What percentage mark-up has been applied?    2 marks

Stuck on 3.8? Mark-up amount = $720 − $480 = $240. Mark-up % = (mark-up ÷ cost price) × 100.

How did this worksheet feel?

What I'll revisit before next class:

Answers — Do not peek before attempting

Section 2 — We do (faded cereal comparison)

Step 1: use unit price.
Step 2: A: 450 ÷ 100 = 4.5 units. B: 600 ÷ 100 = 6 units.
Step 3: A: $5.40 ÷ 4.5 = $1.20 per 100g. B: $7.20 ÷ 6 = $1.20 per 100g.
Step 4: They are equal — neither is a strictly better buy on price alone.
Step 5: "Both cereals cost $1.20 per 100g, so they offer the same value per gram. Choice depends on storage, freshness or preference."

3.1 — Bike discount

Sale = $480 × 0.85 = $408.00.

3.2 — Headphones mark-up

Selling = $45 × 1.80 = $81.00.

3.3 — Detergent unit price

$8.40 ÷ 2 = $4.20 per litre.

3.4 — Discount amount

Discount = $200 × 0.35 = $70.

3.5 — Jacket mark-up

Selling = $60 × (1 + 0.65) = $60 × 1.65 = $99.00.

3.6 — Detergent best buy

X: $8.40 ÷ 2 = $4.20/L. Y: $11.25 ÷ 2.5 = $4.50/L.
Detergent X is the better buy at $4.20/L vs $4.50/L.

3.7 — Successive discounts on a TV

After first discount: $1,200 × 0.80 = $960.
After second discount: $960 × 0.85 = $816.00.
Note: a single 35% discount would give $780. Successive discounts are not the same as adding the percentages — confirms the lesson's "Misconceptions" warning.

3.8 — Mark-up percentage from prices

Mark-up amount = $720 − $480 = $240.
Mark-up % = ($240 ÷ $480) × 100 = 50%.
Check: $480 × 1.50 = $720 ✓.