How to use this cash back calculator
- Choose a currency symbol for display (no exchange-rate conversion).
- Enter your purchase amount and the cash back rate offered by your card or program.
- Optional: set a cash back limit if your card caps rewards per purchase or per period.
- Click Calculate — your reward, net cost after rewards, and calculation steps update on the right.
What is cash back?
Cash back is a rewards program with a simple premise: for each dollar or pound you spend, a percentage is returned to you — usually as a statement credit, direct deposit, or gift card. Reward rates typically range from 1% to 5%, with higher promotional rates during limited-time offers. Cash back has been a staple of credit card rewards since Discover introduced it in 1986; today many issuers offer flat-rate or category-based programs.
How cash back is calculated
The math is straightforward: multiply the purchase price by the cash back percentage rate. Using our Cash Back Calculator, a $100 purchase at 2% returns $2 in rewards.
Apply your card’s reward rate to eligible spend
Worked examples
- $15 at 1% → $0.15 cash back (default calculator values)
- $100 at 2% → $2.00 cash back; net cost after reward ≈ $98
- $500 at 5% with a $20 cap → calculated $25, but reward limited to $20
How cash back programs work
- Make a purchase — use your cash back credit card or join a cash back shopping portal.
- Earn rewards — a percentage of eligible spend is credited to your rewards balance.
- Redeem — claim statement credits, bank deposits, gift cards, or other options depending on your issuer.
Maximizing your cash back
- Choose the right card — higher rates in categories where you spend most (groceries, gas, dining) often beat a flat 1% everywhere.
- Use special offers — activate issuer promotions for bonus cash back on targeted merchants.
- Stack rewards — combine card cash back with store loyalty programs, coupons, or shopping portals when allowed.
- Know your caps — many cards limit earnings per quarter or per purchase; enter your limit in the calculator to model real payouts.
- Pay in full — interest charges can erase reward value; pay your statement balance each month to keep the full benefit. Model payoff time with the Credit Card Payment Calculator.
Examples and use cases
Real-world use cases
- Grocery rewards card: A household estimates $40/month back on $2,000 monthly spend at 2% before choosing a flat-rate vs category card.
- Promotional cap: A shopper checks whether a 5% electronics promo hits the $25 quarterly cap on a $600 laptop purchase.
- Portal stacking: An online buyer compares 3% portal cash back plus 1% card rewards against a single 4% store card offer.
Related calculators
Model percentage discounts with the Percent Off Calculator, sales tax with the Sales Tax Calculator, or commission earnings with the Commission Calculator.