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The perimeter is the length of an outline of a shape. The general way to find the perimeter of any shape is to add up the length of all its sides. For certain shapes, such as rectangles and circles, there are specific formulas you can use to simplify the process. In other instances, you might be missing one or more of the side lengths, but are given other information. In cases like this, you must complete extra steps to find the missing side length before you can calculate the perimeter.

Calculating the Perimeter of a Shape

The find the perimeter of any shape, add up the length of all its sides. For specific shapes, such as rectangles and circles, just multiply the length of one side by the number of sides to get the total perimeter.

Method 1
Method 1 of 9:

Perimeter Review

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  1. Imagine you had a fence that runs around your entire property. In order to find the total length of the fence, you’d need to calculate the perimeter. Measuring the entire fence by hand is one way to do it, but an easier way is to use the perimeter formula. [1]
    • You might not be given the length of all 4 sides, which is another reason why you’d need to use an equation to find the perimeter instead of just addition.
  2. Since a circle doesn’t have any straight lines, the method for figuring out its perimeter is a little bit different. It involves using Pi and the radius or diameter of the entire shape. [2]
    • You can’t find the perimeter of a circle just by measuring it; you have to use the circumference equation.
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  3. These are feet, inches, centimeters, miles, etc. Since you’re measuring the length of something, you always have to use real-world distance units when you get your answer. [3]
    • You’ll have to make sure all your units are the same before you do your equation, too. This might mean changing feet to inches, miles to feet, or anything in between.
  4. Although you might have to show your work on your homework or assignment, you can always use an online calculator to double check that you’re doing it right. Search for the shape you’re working on + perimeter in a web browser to find free online calculators that you can use. [4]
    • Make sure you’re using a calculator for your specific shape.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of Rectangles (Including Squares)

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  1. The formula is , where equals the perimeter of the rectangle, equals the width of the rectangle, and equals the height of the triangle. If you don’t know the length of the width and height of the rectangle, you cannot use this formula.
    • You can also use the formula , where each variable is equal to the length of one side of the rectangle. A variable is any number in your equation that you use, signified by letters (a, b, c, d).
    • If you don’t know the height and width of your shape, you can plug in the information you do know, like the area, the length of one side, or the length of the diagonal.
  2. It doesn’t matter which measurement you use for the width and which you use for the height since the width and height are two adjacent sides. If the rectangle is not a square, these side lengths must be different.
    • For example, if a rectangle has a width of 5 cm and a height of 10 cm, your formula will look like this: .
  3. Make sure you follow the order of operations and complete the calculation in parentheses before multiplying. The resulting value will give you the perimeter of your rectangle. [5]
    • For example:



      So, the perimeter of the rectangle is 30 cm.
  4. Use the formula to find the perimeter of a square. In this formula is equal to the length of one side of the square. A square has 4 equal sides, so to find its perimeter, you only need to multiply the length of one side by 4. [6]
    • For example, if a square has one side that is 3 cm long, to find the perimeter, you would calculate . So, the perimeter is 12 cm.
  5. Often you will not be given the length of all sides, or even the length of any side. It still may be possible to find the perimeter of a rectangle . [7]
    • If you know the area of the rectangle, and the length of one side, you can find the perimeter by finding the missing width or height using the area formula. Set up the formula . Plug in the values you know, then solve for the missing variable. Now you know the length and width, so you can use the perimeter formula.
    • If you know one side length and the length of the diagonal, you can use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the missing side length. Set up the formula . Substitute the length of the diagonal for , and the side length for . Solve for . Now you know the length and width, so you can use the perimeter formula. [8]
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Method 3
Method 3 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of a Circle

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  1. The circumference is the distance around the circle, and is thus the same as its perimeter. The formula is , where equals the circumference and equals the radius. Since the radius is half the diameter, you can use the formula if you have the diameter instead of the radius. [9]
    • When finding the perimeter of a circle, you don’t use the term perimeter, you use circumference. This is because circles don’t have any straight lines.
    • Pi: A numerical constant, used in this formula to signify the constant numerical shape of a circle.
    • Diameter: The length of the line through the center of the circle that touches both edges.
    • Radius: The length of any line segment from the center of a circle out to the edge of the circle.
  2. Write this in place of the variable . If you are using the diameter formula, substitute for . The length of the radius or diameter should be given, or you should be able to measure it. [10]
    • For example, if the radius of the circle is 6 cm, your formula will look like this: .
  3. You can use 3.14 for , but if you are using a calculator you can use the key for a more precise answer. The product of these three values is equal to the circumference, or perimeter, of the circle. [11]
    • For example: . So the circumference of the circle is 37.7 cm.
  4. The area of a circle is given by the formula . So, if you plug the area into the formula, you can solve for . Once you have , you can use the circumference formula to find the circumference. [12]
    • For example, if you are told that the area of a circle is 64 square centimeters, you would set up the formula . Then, solve for :





      So, the radius of the circle is about 4.51 cm. Now you can plug this value into the perimeter formula and solve.
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Method 4
Method 4 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of Triangles

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  1. The formula is , where the variables equal the three sides of the triangle. This formula is the same whether or not the triangle is right. You must have all side lengths to use this formula. If you know that you have an equilateral triangle, you only need one side length, since an equilateral triangle has three equal sides. [13]
    • For example, if a triangle has sides that are 5, 7, and 12 cm in length, you simply add up all the side lengths to find the perimeter: . So, the perimeter of the triangle is 24 cm.
  2. Sometimes you might be presented with a right triangle that only has two side lengths given. In this case, set up the Pythagorean formula to find the missing side length. The formula is , where is the length of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle), and and are the other two side lengths. Solve for the missing variable, and this will give you your missing side length. [14]
    • For example, if you have a right triangle with a hypotenuse of 10 cm, and one side length of 6 cm, set up the Pythagorean formula like this:
    • Solve for :




    • Now that you have all three side lengths, you can add them up to find the perimeter: . So, the perimeter of the triangle is 24 cm.
  3. An isosceles triangle is when the height, or the altitude, bisects the base. If you know the height and base of the triangle, you can use the Pythagorean theorem to find the missing side lengths. [15]
    • For example, if an isosceles triangle has a height of 10 cm and a base of 6 cm, you can think of the height creating two right triangles. Since the height bisects the base, one side length of the right triangle will be 3 cm. The other side length will be equal to the height: 10 cm. The missing side length is the hypotenuse.
    • Set up the Pythagorean formula, plugging in the side lengths: .
    • Make the necessary calculations to find the missing side length:



      .
    • An isosceles triangle has 2 equal sides. So, the perimeter of the triangle is equal to , where equals the length of one side, and equals the base. So, if you know the length of the base and one side, you can find the perimeter of an isosceles triangle: . So, the perimeter of the triangle is 26.88 cm.
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Method 5
Method 5 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of a Regular Polygon

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  1. A regular polygon is a polygon that is equiangular and equilateral. You can find the length of one side if you know the length of the polygon’s apothem or radius. The apothem is the distance between the center of the polygon to the midpoint of any side, and the radius is the distance between the center of the polygon and any vertex. [16]
    • To find a side length given the apothem, use the formula , where equals the side length and equals the apothem. [17]
    • To find the side length given the radius, use the formula , where equals the side length and equals the radius. [18]
    • For example, if the radius of a hexagon is 5 cm, to find the side length, you would calculate:



  2. The formula is , where is the number of sides the polygon has, and is the length of one side. [19]
  3. Plug the values of and into the formula. Multiply these two values to find the perimeter of the polygon. [20]
    • For example, if a regular hexagon has a side length of 5 cm, you would calculate . So, the perimeter of the hexagon is 30 cm.
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Method 6
Method 6 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of an Ellipse

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  1. An ellipse is an oval-shaped circle, so it doesn’t have any straight lines. To find the perimeter, you need to know the circumference of both the height and the width, or variables a and b. If you don’t know this information already, you can measure your ellipse on your own. [21]
    • Normally, variable a goes from left to right on the major axis, and variable b goes up and down on the minor axis.
  2. There are actually a few different equations that you can use to find the perimeter of an ellipse, and they all may give you a slightly different answer. The easiest formula to use is: [22]
    • This will give you an answer within 5% of the true perimeter of the ellipse.
    • For example, if variable a is 3 and variable b is 2, your equation would look like this:
  3. Now you can use your inputted variables to find the perimeter of the ellipse. Remember that this is an approximate answer, not an exact one. [23]
    • For example, if the equation is , , rounded to 2 sig figs.
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Method 7
Method 7 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of a Sector

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  1. A sector is a triangular slice taken from a whole circle (it looks like a piece of pizza). To start the equation, you need to find the length, or variable l, of the arc itself. [24]
    • If you aren’t given that information, you can solve for l with this equation: .
  2. To find the perimeter of a sector, plug your numbers into this equation: , where “2r” is 2 times the radius and “θ” is the angle of the sector. Once you’ve done that, you can solve for the perimeter. [25]
    • For example, .
  3. Once you’ve plugged in your variables, you can use the order of operations to solve for the perimeter. This is an exact number, so use the equal sign for your answer. [26]
    • .
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Method 8
Method 8 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of a Pentagon

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  1. A pentagon always has 5 sides, so you’ll always be able to plug 5 into your equation. Then, all you need to find out is the length of one side to plug in for the variable. [27]
  2. The formula to find the perimeter of a pentagon is . The variable “s” stands for the length of 1 side. [28]
    • For example, your equation might look like this: .
  3. Once you’ve got your equation, you can use the formula to figure out the answer. Check your answer on a calculator to make sure it’s right. [29]
    • For example, .
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Method 9
Method 9 of 9:

Finding the Perimeter of a Quadrilateral

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  1. A quadrilateral looks like a rectangle with uneven sides. If you know all 4 sides of the quadrilateral, you can find the perimeter by adding them all up. [30]
    • If you don’t know the length of all 4 sides, you can use the information you do have to solve for variable x.
  2. To find the perimeter of a quadrilateral, you just need to add up the side lengths. The formula is . [31]
    • For example, .
  3. Once you know all 4 side lengths, just add them up. Don’t forget to put your units on the end of your answer. [32]
    • For example, .
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Community Q&A

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Add New Question
  • Question
    If given area and length of a rectangle, how do I find the perimeter?
    Top Answerer
    Divide the area by the length, giving you the width. Add twice the width to twice the length.
  • Question
    What's the perimeter of a triangle that has sides of 2/3, 2/5 and 2/3?
    Top Answerer
    Add the three sides together: 2/3 + 2/5 + 2/3 = 10/15 + 6/15 + 10/15 = 26/15 = 1 11/15.
  • Question
    The perimeter of a rectangle is 64 feet. Length is 7 feet less than 2 times the width. What are the dimensions of the rectangle?
    Top Answerer
    Let x = the width. Then the length is 2x - 7. The perimeter is twice the width plus twice the length: 64 = (2x) + 2(2x - 7) = (2x) + (4x - 14) = 6x - 14. So 64 = 6x - 14, and 78 = 6x. Then x = 13 ft, and the length is (2)(13) - 7 = 26 - 7 = 19 ft. To check: (2)(13) + (2)(19) = 26 + 38 = 64.
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      Tips

      • To find the perimeter of a trapezoid when you are missing side lengths, in general you want to divide the trapezoid into two right triangles and one rectangle. From there you can use the properties of right triangles and rectangles to find the missing side lengths.
      • To find the perimeter of a rhombus when you are missing side lengths, in general you want to use the diagonal(s) of the rhombus to divide the shape into several right triangles. Then you can use the Pythagorean theorem or trigonometry to find the missing side lengths.
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      14. https://www.omnicalculator.com/math/perimeter#how-to-find-perimeter-perimeter-formulas
      15. https://byjus.com/maths/sector-of-a-circle/
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      17. https://byjus.com/maths/sector-of-a-circle/
      18. https://www.omnicalculator.com/math/perimeter#how-to-find-perimeter-perimeter-formulas
      19. https://tutors.com/math-tutors/geometry-help/how-to-find-the-perimeter-of-a-pentagon
      20. https://tutors.com/math-tutors/geometry-help/how-to-find-the-perimeter-of-a-pentagon
      21. https://www.omnicalculator.com/math/perimeter#how-to-find-perimeter-perimeter-formulas
      22. https://www.math-only-math.com/perimeter-of-quadrilateral.html
      23. https://www.math-only-math.com/perimeter-of-quadrilateral.html

      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      The right way to find perimeter depends on the shape you're working with. For rectangles, use the formula p = 2 (w + h), where w is the width of the rectangle and h is the height. To find the perimeter of a square, use the formula p = 4x, where x is the length of 1 side of the square. If you need to find the perimeter of a triangle, use the formula p = a + b + c, where a, b, and c are the lengths of the 3 sides of the triangle. Finally, to find the perimeter of a circle, use the formula c = π (d), where c is the perimeter and d is the diameter. If you want to learn how to find the perimeter of any regular polygon, keep reading the article!

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