How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (2024)

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A walkthrough for the entire process of completing the square

Co-authored byDavid Jiaand Carmine Shannon

Last Updated: May 15, 2024Fact Checked

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  • Completing the Square
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  • Completing the Square (Vertex Form)
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  • Solving Quadratic Equations
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  • Calculator, Practice Problems, and Answers
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Completing the square is a helpful technique that allows you to rearrange a quadratic equation into a neat form that makes it easier to visualize or even solve. It’s used to determine the vertex of a parabola and to find the roots of a quadratic equation. If you’re just starting out with completing the square, or if the math isn’t exactly adding up, follow along with these easy steps to become a quadratic whiz.

Formula for Completing the Square

To complete the square with How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (3), subtract C from both sides, then add How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (4) to both sides. Now the equation can be factored as How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (5), where the left side is a perfect square.

Section 1 of 3:

Completing the Square

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  1. 1

    Write down the equation. Let's say you're working with the following equation: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (8)

  2. 2

    Subtract the last term from both sides of the equation. To isolate your x terms, move the constant (number without an “x”) to the other side of the equation by subtracting it from both sides. How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (10)[1]

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  3. 3

    Halve the coefficient of the x term and square it. Take the number in front of the x (second) term in the equation, divide it by 2, and then square it.[2] In this example, the second term is How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (12) so How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (13) and How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (14).

  4. 4

    Add the term to both sides of the equation. By adding this term to the left side of the equation, you create a polynomial that is a perfect square. To keep the equation balanced, add the number to the right side of the equation, as well.[3] How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (16)

  5. 5

    Factor the left side of the equation. Now that the left side is a perfect square, you can rewrite it as (x + the halved second term)2, or How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (18) for this example. You can check your math by multiplying it out and seeing if it gives you the first three terms from the last step.[4]

  6. 6

    Take the square root of both sides. To solve your equation, undo the square on the left by taking the square root of both sides.[5] How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (20).

  7. 7

    Solve to find the roots of the equation. When you take the square root of the right side of the equation, the result is both negative and positive, since negative numbers are also positive when they’re squared. To solve this equation, break it into two parts: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (22) and How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (23).[6]

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Section 2 of 3:

Writing Vertex Form by Completing the Square

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  1. 1

    Write your equation. For this example, try an equation where the How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (26) term has a coefficient, like How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (27).

    • Vertex form is a way of writing a quadratic equation How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (28) with the coordinates of the vertex of the parabola formed by that equation.
    • Vertex form is written as How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (29) where How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (30) is the vertex of a parabola.[7]
  2. 2

    Move the constant to the right side of the equation. Isolate the x terms by adding 15 to both sides of the equation. How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (32)

  3. 3

    Factor out the coefficient of the squared term from the first 2 terms. To complete the square, the leading coefficient has to be 1, so factor 3 out of the left side of the equation.[8] How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (34).

  4. 4

    Halve the second term and square it. The second term, also known as the b term, in the equation, is How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (36). First, divide it by two: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (37). Then, square the term: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (38).[9]

    • Completing the square refers to finding a constant “C” that you can add to the first two terms to make a perfect square trinomial, which can be factored into the expression How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (39). The number you get at this step is the constant that completes the square.
  5. 5

    Add the term to both sides of the equation. Use the new term to make a perfect square trinomial by adding it into the parentheses.[10] Since you factored out a 3, multiply the new term by three before adding it to the right side of the equation with the y term.

    • How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (41)
  6. 6

    Factor the trinomial as a square and isolate “y.” Now that you have a perfect square in the parenthesis, factor it out using the halved b term from before, in this case How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (43). Write your equation as a factored square, subtract the constant from the y side, and add it to the x side.[11]

    • How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (44)
    • How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (45)
    • If you’re using the vertex form How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (46) to find the vertex of a parabola (h, k), remember that “h” has to be negative and “k” has to be positive. In this example, the vertex is How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (47).[12]
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Section 3 of 3:

Solving Quadratic Equations

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  1. 1

    Write down the problem. Let's say you're working with the following equation: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (50).

  2. 2

    Move the constant terms to the left side of the equation. The constant terms are any terms that aren't attached to a variable.[13] In this case, you have 5 on the left side and 6 on the right side, so subtract 6 from both sides of the equation. Now you have How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (52)

  3. 3

    Factor out the coefficient of the squared term. In this case, 3 is the coefficient of the How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (54) term. Divide each term by 3, then put the terms into parenthesis with a 3 in front. So, How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (55), How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (56), and How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (57). Now the equation is: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (58)[14]

  4. 4

    Divide by the constant you just factored out. Since you divided each term by 3, it can be removed without impacting the equation. Now you have How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (60)[15]

  5. 5

    Move the constant to the right side of the equation. Isolate the x terms by moving How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (62) to the other side of the equal sign. How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (63)

  6. 6

    Halve the second term and square it. Next, take the second term, How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (65), also known as the b term, and halve and square it to complete the square. When you’re done, add it to both sides of the equation to keep it balanced.[16] How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (66)

    • How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (67)
    • How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (68)
  7. 7

    Write the left side of the equation as a perfect square. Since you've already used a formula to find the missing term, all you have to do is put x and half of the second coefficient in parentheses and square them, like so: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (70). The equation should now read: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (71).[17]

    • Note that factoring that perfect square will give you the three terms: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (72).
  8. 8

    Take the square root of both sides. On the left side of the equation, the square root of How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (74) is just How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (75). On the right side, the square root of the denominator, 9, is 3, and the square root of 7 is How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (76), so the square root is How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (77).[18]

    • Remember to write How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (78) because a square root can be positive or negative.
  9. 9

    Isolate the variable. To isolate the variable x, move the constant term How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (80) over to the right side of the equation. You now have two possible answers for x: How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (81). You can leave it at that or find the actual square root of 7 if you need an answer without the radical sign.[19]

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Calculator, Practice Problems, and Answers

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Sample Completing the Square Practice Problems

Sample Completing the Square Practice Answers

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  • Question

    Why do you halve the b value and then square it? It makes no sense to me.

    How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (85)

    Community Answer

    It does seem strange and arbitrary, but there is a reason for it. The power move is taking the square root of both sides, but you can't simplify the square root of most polynomials. The step you ask about is a setup move to make the power move work. If I have, for example, x^2 + 4x = 5, and take the square root of both sides, nothing happens, it just makes a mess. But if I add 4 to both sides first and take the square root of both sides of x^2 + 4x + 4 = 9, it simplifies to |x+2| = 3 and the quadratic equation is reduced to a linear equation.

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  • Question

    What's the completing the square formula if x > 1?

    How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (86)

    Donagan

    Top Answerer

    The value of x doesn't matter. The process remains as shown above.

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  • Question

    In Part 1 of 2, how did you get 11/9 in Step 8?

    How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (87)

    Donagan

    Top Answerer

    Both sides of that equation are being divided by 3 (to get rid of the coefficient of the first term). Dividing the second term (11/3) by 3 gives us 11/9.

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      • Even after you know the quadratic formula, regularly practice completing the square either by proving the quadratic formula or by doing some practice problems. That way you won't forget how to do it when you need it.

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      • Be sure to put the How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (88) in front of square roots, otherwise you will only get one answer.

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      More References (10)

      1. https://mathbitsnotebook.com/Algebra1/Quadratics/QDVertexForm.html
      2. https://mathbitsnotebook.com/Algebra1/Quadratics/QDVertexForm.html
      3. https://mathbitsnotebook.com/Algebra1/Quadratics/QDVertexForm.html
      4. https://www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra/x2f8bb11595b61c86:quadratic-functions-equations/x2f8bb11595b61c86:more-on-completing-square/a/solving-quadratic-equations-by-completing-the-square
      5. ​​https://www.whatcom.edu/home/showdocument?id=1766
      6. https://www.whatcom.edu/home/showdocument?id=1766
      7. https://www.whatcom.edu/home/showdocument?id=1766
      8. https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/sat/x0a8c2e5f:untitled-652/x0a8c2e5f:passport-to-advanced-math-lessons-by-skill/a/gtp--sat-math--article--solving-quadratic-equations--lesson
      9. https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/sat/x0a8c2e5f:untitled-652/x0a8c2e5f:passport-to-advanced-math-lessons-by-skill/a/gtp--sat-math--article--solving-quadratic-equations--lesson
      10. https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/sat/x0a8c2e5f:untitled-652/x0a8c2e5f:passport-to-advanced-math-lessons-by-skill/a/gtp--sat-math--article--solving-quadratic-equations--lesson

      About This Article

      How to Complete the Square: Formula, Method, & Examples (105)

      Co-authored by:

      David Jia

      Academic Tutor

      This article was co-authored by David Jia and by wikiHow staff writer, Carmine Shannon. David Jia is an Academic Tutor and the Founder of LA Math Tutoring, a private tutoring company based in Los Angeles, California. With over 10 years of teaching experience, David works with students of all ages and grades in various subjects, as well as college admissions counseling and test preparation for the SAT, ACT, ISEE, and more. After attaining a perfect 800 math score and a 690 English score on the SAT, David was awarded the Dickinson Scholarship from the University of Miami, where he graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration. Additionally, David has worked as an instructor for online videos for textbook companies such as Larson Texts, Big Ideas Learning, and Big Ideas Math. This article has been viewed 431,116 times.

      7 votes - 83%

      Co-authors: 32

      Updated: May 15, 2024

      Views:431,116

      Categories: Algebra

      Article SummaryX

      To complete the square for a standard equation, you'll need to transform the equation to vertex form. Start by factoring out the coefficient of the squared term from the first two terms, then halve the second term and square it. Next, add and subtract this term from the equation. Pull the term you subtracted out of the parentheses, then convert the terms in the parentheses into a perfect square. Lastly, combine the constant terms and write out the equation in vertex form. The vertex form is your answer. If you want to learn more, like how to solve a quadratic function, keep reading the article!

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