You can use active tasks endpoint for your case. Besides other things it includes a progress percentage for the task. A replication task for example will look like this
{
"checkpointed_source_seq": 68585,
"continuous": false,
"doc_id": null,
"doc_write_failures": 0,
"docs_read": 4524,
"docs_written": 4524,
"missing_revisions_found": 4524,
"pid": "<0.1538.5>",
"progress": 44**,
"replication_id": "9bc1727d74d49d9e157e260bb8bbd1d5",
"revisions_checked": 4524,
"source": "mailbox",
"source_seq": 154419,
"started_on": 1376116644,
"target": "http://mailsrv:5984/mailbox",
"type": "replication",
"updated_on": 1376116651
}
The update seq number is specific to the database. Suppose you have 9 documents in a database and the update_seq for it is 17. update_seq indicates that the database has been updated 17 times even though the number of documents are 9. Now if you replicate it to a new database which is empty then the update_seq of the new database would be 9 because it has only been updated 9 times. Since the new database was empty only 9 new documents were created.
If it contained a few documents then the update number would have been different depending upon what their _rev's were. So update_seq can't be relied upon to calculate progress of replication operation.