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Learn the formulas for area and perimeter and use them to solve fun, real-world problems about spaces and boundaries!
Have you ever wondered how people figured out how to measure the ground they walked on? Thousands of years ago, people needed to measure land so they could build homes, plant crops, and share space fairly. That's how the ideas of area and perimeter were born!
So here's the big question: How do we measure the space inside a rectangle, and how do we measure the distance around it? That's exactly what you'll learn in this lesson!
Before we jump into formulas, let's make sure we understand four important words. These are the building blocks of everything in this lesson.
Let's look at a rectangle that is 8 units long and 4 units wide. The diagram below shows you both the perimeter (the colored border around the outside) and the area (the square tiles filling the inside).
Can you count the tiles? There are 8 columns and 4 rows. That means 8 × 4 = 32 square units of area. And if you walked all the way around the outside, you'd travel 8 + 4 + 8 + 4 = 24 units of perimeter.
Now let's learn the two formulas for rectangles. Don't worry — they're short and easy to remember! In these formulas, we use the letter l for length and w for width.
Here's what that means: since a rectangle has two long sides and two short sides, you multiply the length by 2, multiply the width by 2, and add them together. You can also think of it as P = l + w + l + w.
This one is even simpler! Just multiply the length times the width. The answer is always in square units — like square feet (ft²), square inches (in²), or square meters (m²).
Let's compare perimeter and area side by side so you can see how they're different. The diagram below shows the same three rectangles — look at how their perimeters and areas change when the shape changes!
Notice something cool? The first two rectangles have the same area (12 square units) but different perimeters (14 vs. 16 units). That's because area and perimeter measure two different things! And the third shape is a square — a special kind of rectangle where all four sides are equal.
| Rectangle | Length | Width | Perimeter | Area |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rectangle A | 4 units | 3 units | 14 units | 12 sq units |
| Rectangle B | 6 units | 2 units | 16 units | 12 sq units |
| Square C | 5 units | 5 units | 20 units | 25 sq units |
Let's solve a real-world problem step by step. Read the story, then follow along!
Students sometimes mix up when to use perimeter and when to use area. Here's a handy chart to help you decide!
| Use Perimeter When… | Use Area When… |
|---|---|
| You need to put a fence around a yard | You need to cover a floor with carpet |
| You want to add a border around a picture | You want to know how much paint covers a wall |
| You're measuring ribbon around a gift box | You want to know the size of a garden |
| You're putting tape around the edges of a poster | You need to figure out how many tiles cover a floor |
| You're running around a rectangular field | You're figuring out how much wrapping paper covers a rectangle |
Here's the trick: if the problem talks about going around something, you need perimeter. If the problem talks about covering or filling something, you need area.
You're building a strong math foundation right now! The area and perimeter formulas for rectangles will help you tackle bigger challenges as you grow. Here's a peek at what's ahead.
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Later |
|---|---|
| Area of a rectangle: l × w | Area of triangles, circles, and other shapes |
| Perimeter of a rectangle: (2 × l) + (2 × w) | Perimeter of all kinds of polygons (shapes with straight sides) |
| Measuring in square feet, square inches | Volume — measuring how much space fills a 3D box (in cubic units!) |
| Solving one-rectangle problems | Breaking big shapes into smaller rectangles and adding up their areas |
In 5th grade, you'll learn how to find the area of shapes that aren't rectangles. You'll also learn about volume, which is like area but for 3D shapes — imagine filling a box with tiny cubes instead of covering a floor with tiles. Every step builds on what you know right now!
Try these five problems on your own! When you're ready, click "Show Answer" to check your work. Remember to use the right formula and include your units.
In this lesson, you learned two powerful formulas for rectangles. The perimeter formula — P = (2 × l) + (2 × w) — tells you the distance all the way around the outside edges. The area formula — A = l × w — tells you how much space is inside the rectangle. Perimeter is measured in regular units like feet or meters, while area is measured in square units like square feet or square meters.
You also learned how to tell the difference: use perimeter when a problem talks about going around something (fences, borders, ribbon), and use area when it talks about covering something (carpet, paint, grass seed). You practiced solving real-world problems step by step, and you even discovered that rectangles with the same perimeter can have different areas. These formulas will follow you through your whole math journey — you're going to use them again and again! 🎉