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Adding & subtracting decimals

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visibility 96update 7 months agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Add and subtract decimals
 

🧠 Key Words

  • decimal part
  • mentally / using a mental method
  • written method
Show Definitions
  • decimal part: The portion of a decimal number that comes after the decimal point.
  • mentally / using a mental method: Solving a calculation in your head without writing down the steps.
  • written method: A step-by-step procedure written down to solve a calculation.
 

When you add and subtract decimal numbers mentally, there are different methods you can use.

  • When you are adding, you can separate the numbers into their whole-number part and their decimal part. You can then separately add the whole-number parts and add the decimal parts, and finally add the whole-number answer to the decimal answer.
  • When you are subtracting, you can separate the number you are subtracting into its whole-number part and its decimal part. Subtract the whole-number part first and then subtract the decimal part second.
  • If one of the numbers you are adding or subtracting is close to a whole number, you can round it to the nearest whole number, do the addition or subtraction, then adjust your answer at the end.
 
📘 Worked example

Work these out mentally.

a. $2.3 7.8$

b. $6.9 12.4$

c. $13.3 - 5.8$

Answer:

a. $2.3 7.8 = 2 7 0.3 0.8$
$= 9 1.1$
$= 10.1$

b. $6.9 12.4 = 7 12.4 - 0.1$
$= 19.4 - 0.1$
$= 19.3$

c. $13.3 - 5.8 = 13.3 - 6 0.2$
$= 7.3 0.2$
$= 7.5$

a. Separate the numbers into whole-number parts and decimal parts.
Separately, add the whole-number parts and add the decimal parts.
Add the whole-number answer to the decimal answer.

b. Round $6.9$ up to $7$.
Add $7$ to $12.4$.
Subtract $0.1$.

c. Round $5.8$ up to $6$.
Subtract $6$ from $13.3$.
Add $0.2$.

 

When you use a written method to add and subtract decimal numbers, always write the calculation in columns, with the decimal points vertically in line. Then add and subtract as normal, but remember to write the decimal point in your answer.

 
📘 Worked example

Work out:

a. $27.52 4.8$

b. $43.6 - 5.45$

Answer:

a.

27.52
4.80
32.32

b.

43.60
- 5.45
38.15

a. First write $4.8$ as $4.80$. Start with the hundredths column: $2 0 = 2$.
Next add the tenths: $5 8 = 13$. Write down the $3$ and carry the $1$.
Now add the units: $7 4 1 = 12$. Write down the $2$ and carry the $1$.
Finally, add the tens: $2 1 = 3$.

b. First write $43.6$ as $43.60$.
Start with the hundredths column. You can’t take $5$ from $0$ ($0 - 5$), so borrow from the $6$ tenths, then work out $10 - 5 = 5$.
Now subtract the tenths: $5 - 4 = 1$.
Now subtract the units. You can’t take $5$ from $3$ ($3 - 5$), so borrow from the $4$ tens, then work out $13 - 5 = 8$.
Finally, subtract the tens: $3 - 0 = 3$.

 

🧠 PROBLEM-SOLVING Strategy

Adding and Subtracting Decimals

Use mental or written strategies depending on the numbers and context.

Mental methods
  1. Split into whole-number and decimal parts — add/subtract whole parts, then decimal parts, then combine results.
  2. Rounding and adjusting — if a number is close to a whole number, round it, calculate, then adjust your answer.
  3. Complements — for calculations like $1 - \text{decimal}$, think of how much to make $1$.
Written methods
  1. Line up decimal points in column form.
  2. Add or subtract as whole numbers, starting from the smallest place value.
  3. Place the decimal point in the answer directly under the other decimal points.
  4. Use trailing zeros to keep place values aligned.

Quick examples

  • Mental split: $2.3 7.8 = (2 7) (0.3 0.8) = 9 1.1 = 10.1$
  • Round & adjust: $6.9 12.4 = (7 12.4) - 0.1 = 19.4 - 0.1 = 19.3$
  • Written: $43.6 - 5.45 = 43.60 - 5.45 = 38.15$
 

EXERCISES

1. Use a mental method to work out the answers to the following.

a) $3.5 4.2$

b) $12.7 4.5$

c) $4.9 - 1.5$

d) $14.6 - 6.6$

👀 Show answer
a) $3.5 4.2 = 7.7$

b) $12.7 4.5 = 17.2$

c) $4.9 - 1.5 = 3.4$

d) $14.6 - 6.6 = 8.0$

🔎 Reasoning Tip

Comparing decimals: Separate the numbers into their whole-number parts and their decimal parts.

 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Question: What is the easiest way to subtract a decimal from the number 1? For example: $1 - 0.3$, $1 - 0.25$, $1 - 0.405$ or $1 - 0.6839$?

Discussion task: Explore mental strategies and shortcuts for subtracting decimals from 1. Consider the role of complements and place value.

Follow-up prompts:

1. How does writing decimals with the same number of decimal places help?
2. How is this related to the concept of number complements (e.g., how far a number is from 1)?
👀 show answer
  • Think of the subtraction $1 - x$ as “what do I add to $x$ to make 1?”. This is called the complement to 1.
  • Write both numbers with the same number of decimal places by adding zeros if needed.
    • $1.000 - 0.300 = 0.700$
    • $1.00 - 0.25 = 0.75$
    • $1.000 - 0.405 = 0.595$
    • $1.0000 - 0.6839 = 0.3161$
  • This works because lining up decimal places helps visualise the subtraction and avoid place-value errors.
  • Mental tip: For quick mental maths, subtract each decimal digit from 9, except the final digit which you subtract from 10 (adjusting for carrying if needed).
 

EXERCISES

3. Match each green question card with its correct pink answer card.

Matching cards with green questions and pink answers

👀 Show answer
$1 - 0.36 = 0.64$
$1 - 0.78 = 0.22$
$1 - 0.44 = 0.56$
$1 - 0.284 = 0.716$
$1 - 0.432 = 0.568$

4. Zara mentally works out $14.4 - 6.5$ like this:

Zara explaining her subtraction method with whole-number and decimal parts

Use Zara’s method to mentally work out the following.

a) $7.4 - 2.6$

b) $8.3 - 2.9$

c) $12.5 - 9.8$

d) $15.1 - 5.7$

👀 Show answer
a) Whole: $7 - 2 = 5$, Decimal: $0.4 - 0.6 = -0.2$, Combined: $5 - 0.2 = 4.8$

b) Whole: $8 - 2 = 6$, Decimal: $0.3 - 0.9 = -0.6$, Combined: $6 - 0.6 = 5.4$

c) Whole: $12 - 9 = 3$, Decimal: $0.5 - 0.8 = -0.3$, Combined: $3 - 0.3 = 2.7$

d) Whole: $15 - 5 = 10$, Decimal: $0.1 - 0.7 = -0.6$, Combined: $10 - 0.6 = 9.4$
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Scenario: Zara works out $7.5 4.8$ mentally by rounding and adjusting:

“If I round 4.8 up to 5, I can change $7.5 4.8$ to $7.5 5$, which equals 12.5. Then I must add the extra 0.2, which gives me 12.7.”

Question: Is Zara correct? Discuss in pairs or small groups.

Follow-up prompts:

1. Why does rounding and adjusting work in this calculation?
2. Could Zara have rounded 7.5 instead and adjusted afterwards? Would it be quicker?
👀 show answer
  • Yes — Zara is correct. $7.5 4.8 = 7.5 (5 - 0.2) = 12.5 - 0.2 = 12.3$ is incorrect — wait, let's check carefully:
    • She rounded 4.8 up to 5 (difference of 0.2).
    • $7.5 5 = 12.5$.
    • Since she added 0.2 too much, she should subtract 0.2, not add it.
    The correct answer is $12.3$, not 12.7.
  • Common mistake: When rounding a number up, you must subtract the excess afterwards; when rounding down, you must add the difference afterwards.
  • Correct method:$7.5 4.8 = 7.5 (5 - 0.2) = 12.5 - 0.2 = 12.3$.
 

EXERCISES

6. Mentally work out the following. Use the method of rounding one of the numbers to a whole number. One of them has been started for you.

Thought bubbles showing rounding method examples

a) $4.3 7.9$

b) $8.9 9.6$

c) $22.8 3.3$

d) $5.4 - 1.9$

e) $14.9 - 4.4$

f) $21.1 - 6.7$

👀 Show answer
a) Round $7.9 \to 8$: $4.3 8=12.3$, then subtract $0.1 \Rightarrow \boxed{12.2}$.

b) Round $9.6 \to 10$: $8.9 10=18.9$, then subtract $0.4 \Rightarrow \boxed{18.5}$.

c) Round $3.3 \to 3$: $22.8 3=25.8$, then add $0.3 \Rightarrow \boxed{26.1}$.

d) Round $1.9 \to 2$: $5.4-2=3.4$, then add $0.1 \Rightarrow \boxed{3.5}$.

e) Round $14.9 \to 15$: $15-4.4=10.6$, then subtract $0.1 \Rightarrow \boxed{10.5}$.

f) Round $6.7 \to 7$: $21.1-7=14.1$, then add $0.3 \Rightarrow \boxed{14.4}$.

7. Use a written method to work out the following.

a) $25.81 8.4$

b) $8.76 - 4.1$

c) $38.91 - 9.78$

👀 Show answer
a) $\boxed{34.21}$   (since $25.81 8.40=34.21$)

b) $\boxed{4.66}$   ($8.76-4.10=4.66$)

c) $\boxed{29.13}$

8. Bo records his mass at the start and end of every month. Here are his records for June and July.

Table of Bo's mass for June and July: Start/End values

a) During which month, June or July, did Bo’s mass decrease the most?

b) At the start of August Bo’s mass was $88.35\ \text{kg}$. During August his mass decreased by $1.82\ \text{kg}$. What was Bo’s mass at the end of August?

👀 Show answer
From the table: June decrease $= 95.45 - 91.92 = \boxed{3.53\ \text{kg}}$. July decrease $= 91.92 - 88.35 = \boxed{3.57\ \text{kg}}$. a) Greater decrease in July (by $0.04\ \text{kg}$).

b) $88.35 - 1.82 = \boxed{86.53\ \text{kg}}$ at end of August.

9. Use a written method to work out the following.

a) $4.76 - (-12.52)$

b) $32.6 - (-0.742)$

👀 Show answer
a) $4.76 - (-12.52) = 4.76 12.52 = \boxed{17.28}$

b) $32.6 - (-0.742) = 32.6 0.742 = \boxed{33.342}$

🔎 Reasoning Tip

Negative numbers: Subtracting a negative is the same as adding.

10. Marcus and Arun use different methods to work out $10-4.83$.

Marcus explaining regrouping/column subtraction for 10 − 4.83

Arun explaining stepwise place-value subtraction to get 5.17

a) Critique both methods by explaining the advantages and disadvantages of each of their methods.

b) Can you improve on their methods?

c) Which method do you prefer to use to work out subtractions like these? Explain why you prefer this method.

👀 Show answer
a)
Marcus (column subtraction with regrouping): Advantages — Algorithmic and reliable; aligns place values; scales to longer decimals; gives the exact answer $5.17$. Disadvantages — Regrouping across the decimal point (turning $10$ into $9$ units $ 9$ tenths $ 10$ hundredths) can feel fiddly; slower without pencil-and-paper.

Arun (stepwise place-value differences): He does $10-4=6$, then $6.0-0.8=5.2$, then $5.20-0.03=5.17$. Advantages — Mental‑math friendly; highlights place value; minimal writing. Disadvantages — Requires careful tracking so adjustments stay equivalent; can take more steps for numbers with many non‑zero decimals.

b) A tidy mental improvement is a compensation / counting‑up method: Count up from $4.83$ to $10$: $4.83 \rightarrow 5.00$ is $0.17$, then $5.00 \rightarrow 10.00$ is $5$. Total $=0.17 5=\boxed{5.17}$. Or use compensation directly: $10-4.83=(10-5) 0.17=5.17$. This is short, reduces error, and needs only two easy steps because $10$ is a round number.

c) Preference: the compensation/counting‑up method for problems like $10-4.83$, because working to the nearest whole/round number makes the arithmetic quick (just add $0.17$ and $5$) while keeping place value clear. For longer decimals or when writing is allowed, Marcus’s column method is my backup since it’s systematic.

11. Work out:

a) $10 - 6.42$

b) $20 - 12.83$

c) $30 - 4.55$

d) $40 - 16.782$

👀 Show answer
a) $3.58$

b) $7.17$

c) $25.45$

d) $23.218$

12. At the cinema, Priya spends $4.75$ on a ticket, $1.75$ on sweets and $0.85$ on a drink.

a) How much does she spend in total?

b) Priya pays with a $10 note. How much change will she receive?

👀 Show answer
a) $4.75 1.75 0.85 = 7.35$ dollars.

b) $10.00 - 7.35 = 2.65$ dollars change.

13. Jed works as a plumber. He has four lengths of pipe that measure $1.8\ \text{m}$, $3.5\ \text{m}$, $2.45\ \text{m}$ and $0.85\ \text{m}$.

a) What is the total length of the four pipes?

b) Jed needs $10\ \text{m}$ of pipe in total to finish a job. How much more pipe must he buy?

👀 Show answer
a) $1.8 3.5 2.45 0.85 = 8.6\ \text{m}$

b) Needs $10.0 - 8.6 = 1.4\ \text{m}$ more pipe.

14. This is how Zara works out $4.6 - 8.21$.

Zara explaining subtraction by reversing and making answer negative

Use Zara’s method to work out the following.

a) $5.43 - 9.57$

b) $8.12 - 15.4$

c) $-13.8 7.92$

d) $6.582 - (4.5 5.061)$

🔎 Reasoning Tip

Rewriting expressions: For part c: \(-13.8 7.92 = 7.92 - 13.8\)

👀 Show answer
a) $9.57 - 5.43 = 4.14$, so answer $= -4.14$

b) $15.4 - 8.12 = 7.28$, so answer $= -7.28$

c) $-13.8 7.92 = -13.8 7.92 = -(13.8 - 7.92) = -5.88$

d) $4.5 5.061 = 9.561$, then $9.561 - 6.582 = 2.979$, so answer $= -2.979$

15. Use a written method to work out the following.

a) $-5.43 - 9.57$

b) $-8.12 - 15.4$

c) $-5.43 - (-9.57)$

d) $-8.12 - (-15.4)$

👀 Show answer
a) $-5.43 - 9.57 = -(5.43 9.57) = -15.00$

b) $-8.12 - 15.4 = -(8.12 15.4) = -23.52$

c) $-5.43 - (-9.57) = -5.43 9.57 = 4.14$

d) $-8.12 - (-15.4) = -8.12 15.4 = 7.28$
 

⚠️ Be careful!

When adding or subtracting decimals in columns, always line up the decimal points — not the edges of the numbers. For example, write $43.6$ as $43.60$ if needed, so it lines up correctly with $5.45$. Misalignment changes place values and gives the wrong answer.

 

📘 What we've learned — Add & Subtract Decimals

  • Mental addition: split into whole part and decimal part, add each, then combine.
    Example: $2.3 7.8 = (2 7) (0.3 0.8) = 9 1.1 = 10.1$
  • Mental subtraction: subtract whole-part, then decimal-part; or use round-and-compensate (adjust back at the end).
    Example: $13.3 - 5.8 \approx 13.3 - 6 0.2 = 7.5$
  • Rounding & compensating: round a number to a friendlier value, do the operation, then fix the difference.
    Example: $6.9 12.4 = (7 12.4) - 0.1 = 19.3$
  • Complements to 1 or 10: for $1 - 0.6839$, think “how much to reach 1” → $0.3161$.
  • Written method (column work): line up decimal points vertically, pad with zeros if needed, and add/subtract as normal. Place the decimal point in the answer directly beneath the column points.
    Tip: write $4.8$ as $4.80$ to match hundredths.
  • Borrowing with decimals: you can regroup across the decimal point (borrow from tenths to hundredths).
  • Subtracting negatives: “minus a negative” means add: $a - (-b) = a b$.
    Example: $4.76 - (-12.52) = 17.28$
  • Estimation check: round to 1 s.f. to sense-check results, especially for money or measures.
  • Money contexts: keep two decimal places and align cents; trailing zeros may be required (e.g., $4.50$).
  • Common slips to avoid:
    • Not aligning decimal points in column work
    • Forgetting to compensate after rounding
    • Dropping necessary trailing zeros in money answers

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