Advanced

Completing the Square

AicademyAicademy
·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
A11·A18

What Completing the Square Means

Completing the square rewrites a quadratic expression from the form into the form . This is called the completed square form.

This is a Higher tier topic. On Foundation, algebraic quadratic solving is by factorising; approximate graphical solutions can also be assessed. Completing the square and the quadratic formula are Higher tier techniques.

The two main uses in GCSE Mathematics:

UseHow completing the square helps
Finding the turning point (vertex)The turning point is directly readable from
Solving quadratic equationsRearrange the completed square form to isolate

The method works because any quadratic with a squared term can be written as a squared bracket with a correction constant. The "completion" refers to turning a partial square into a perfect one.

Why learn it alongside the quadratic formula? Some exam questions specifically ask you to solve "by completing the square" or ask you to "write in the form ". The formula will not earn those marks.

The Method for x2+bx+cx^2 + bx + c

When the coefficient of is 1, follow these three steps.

Step 1 — Halve the coefficient of and write it inside a squared bracket:

Step 2 — Subtract the square of the number you just used (to correct the constant term that expanding introduces):

Step 3 — Add on the original constant :

Worked example 1 — Complete the square for :

Half of 6 is 3, so the bracket is .

Worked example 2 — Complete the square for :

Half of is , so the bracket is .

Completing the Square when a1a \neq 1

When the coefficient of is not 1, factor it out first before applying the standard method.

Step 1 — Factor out the coefficient of from the first two terms only.

Step 2 — Complete the square on the bracket inside.

Step 3 — Multiply back through and simplify.

Worked example — Complete the square for :

Factor out 2 from the first two terms:

Complete the square on . Half of 6 is 3:

Expand the outer factor and simplify:

The correction constant you subtract inside the bracket must be multiplied by when you expand. Forgetting this multiplication is the most common error with questions.

Finding the Turning Point of a Quadratic

Once a quadratic is in completed square form , the turning point (vertex) of its graph can be read off directly.

The minimum value of is 0, which occurs when . At that point, .

Turning point: from the form .

Worked examples:

Completed square formTurning pointType
Minimum
Minimum
Minimum
Maximum

When the parabola opens upward (minimum turning point). When it opens downward (maximum turning point). The sign of does not affect the -coordinate of the vertex.

Worked example — Find the turning point of :

From the earlier worked example: .

Turning point: , and it is a minimum (coefficient of is positive).

Something not quite clicking?

Ask Aica to explain any part of this differently. Free, takes 30 seconds.

Ask Aica

Solving Equations by Completing the Square

After completing the square, isolate the squared bracket and take the square root of both sides.

Worked example — Solve , giving your answers in surd form.

Complete the square:

Rearrange:

Take the square root (remember ):

Worked example 2 — Solve , giving answers to 2 decimal places.

When taking the square root, always write . Forgetting the negative root loses a mark and produces only one solution instead of two.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Halving incorrectly — halving the wrong term

The rule is: halve the coefficient of , not the constant. In , the bracket is , not or .

2. Forgetting to subtract the squared constant

, not . The correction must be subtracted to balance the equation. Omitting this step changes the expression's value.

3. Multiplying the correction by incorrectly

In , the comes from subtracting inside the bracket, which is then multiplied by 2 to give . Writing instead of is the most common error in problems.

4. Writing the turning point coordinates the wrong way round

From , the -coordinate of the turning point is (note the sign change), and the -coordinate is . From : turning point is , not .

5. Forgetting when square-rooting

has two values: and . Writing only the positive root gives one solution instead of two, which costs a method mark and the second answer mark.

Generate revision on any topic you study

Type any topic you're studying and Aicademy generates a complete lesson, quiz, and flashcard set — personalised to your level.

Lessons on anything

Structured, level-matched lessons on any topic you study

Practice quizzes

Find out what you actually know before the exam does

Flashcard sets

Lock in key concepts with instant revision cards

Ask Aica

Stuck on something? Get a clear explanation, any time

Prev

Circle Theorems

Next

Completing the Square

Related lessons

8 Slides

Lesson

Solving Equations and Simultaneous Equations

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

6 Slides

Lesson

Quadratic and Other Graphs

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

7 Slides

Lesson

The Quadratic Formula

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago