Fractions are equal parts of a whole
What you will learn
Know the rule, then use it
These are the short notes. Read each one, then check you can use it in the worked example below.
Numerator
The top number in a fraction — how many parts you have (e.g. in , the 3).
Denominator
The bottom number — how many equal parts make one whole (e.g. in , the 5).
Equivalent fractions
Fractions with the same value — multiply or divide top and bottom by the same number (e.g. = ).
Simplest form (lowest terms)
When top and bottom share no common factor other than 1 (e.g. → ).
Improper fraction
A fraction where the top is bigger than the bottom — its value is more than 1 (e.g. ).
Reciprocal
Flip a fraction to get its reciprocal (e.g. → ); used when dividing fractions.
Rewrite both fractions with the same denominator (use the LCM for efficiency), then add or subtract the numerators only.Never touch the denominator during this step.
Multiply the two numerators to get the new numerator, then multiply the two denominators to get the new denominator.Cross-cancel common factors before multiplying to keep numbers small.
Keep the first fraction unchanged, change ÷ to ×, then flip the second fraction (write its reciprocal).Then multiply as normal.
Divide both numerator and denominator by their highest common factor.Always check your final answer is fully simplified.
A container is full of water. of the container's total capacity is used for cooking. What fraction of the container remains after cooking?
The fraction remaining = − .
Find the LCM of 6 and 9: LCM = 18.
Convert: = and = .
Subtract: − = .
Check is in its simplest form: HCF(11, 18) = 1. ✓
of the container remains.
Build up to the hardest questions
Do them in order. If you miss a step, read the solution, then redo the question without looking.
DiagnosticrecallSimplify fully.
1 mark1 minfrac-d1Show solution
Simplify fully.
- 1.Find the HCF of 18 and 24.
- 2.HCF(18, 24) = 6.
- 3.Divide both numerator and denominator by 6.
- B1: correctly simplified fraction (accept method showing division by any common factor leading to ).
g. giving rather than simplifying fully).
EasyprocedureWork out + . Give your answer in its simplest form.
2 marks2 minsfrac-e1Show solution
Work out + . Give your answer in its simplest form.
- 1.Find the LCM of 8 and 12: LCM = 24.
- 2. = and = .
- 3.Add the numerators: + = .
- 4.Check: HCF(19, 24) = 1 so is already in simplest form.
- M1: correct common denominator of 24 seen (or any correct equivalent pair of fractions with matching denominators).
- A1: (accept unsimplified equivalent only if M1 earned and final answer is correct).
Adding the denominators (writing or similar), or using a common denominator of 96 and failing to simplify correctly.
MediumreasoningA recipe needs of a cup of sugar. Tom wants to make of the full recipe. How much sugar does he need? Show your working.
3 marks3 minsfrac-m1Show solution
A recipe needs of a cup of sugar. Tom wants to make of the full recipe. How much sugar does he need? Show your working.
- 1.He needs of cups.
- 2.'Of' means multiply: × .
- 3.Multiply numerators: 2 × 3 = 6. Multiply denominators: 3 × 4 = 12.
- 4.Simplify = .
cup
- M1: forms the product × (or equivalent multiplication). Award even if unsimplified.
- M1: correct multiplication to obtain or equivalent.
- A1: (fully simplified).
Interpreting ' of the recipe' as subtracting from rather than multiplying, giving − = .
HardreasoningA tank is full. After 21 litres are removed, it is full. Find the capacity of the tank in litres.
4 marks4 minsfrac-h1Show solution
A tank is full. After 21 litres are removed, it is full. Find the capacity of the tank in litres.
- 1.Find the fraction removed: − .
- 2.Convert to tenths: = .
- 3.Fraction removed = − = .
- 4. of the capacity = 21 litres, so full capacity = 21 ÷ () = 21 × = 70 litres.
70 litres
- M1: correct subtraction − with a valid common denominator shown.
- M1: obtains as the fraction removed (accept equivalent fraction).
- M1: sets up × capacity = 21 (or equivalent inverse operation).
- A1: 70 litres.
Subtracting 21 from the fraction (treating litres and fractions as the same thing), or dividing 21 by without inverting (giving 6.3).
Very Hardproblem solvingAlice spends of her savings on a phone and of what remains on headphones. She then has £175 left. How much did she start with?
5 marks5 minsfrac-vh1Show solution
Alice spends of her savings on a phone and of what remains on headphones. She then has £175 left. How much did she start with?
- 1.After buying the phone, Alice has 1 − = of her original savings.
- 2.She spends of on headphones: × = = of original savings.
- 3.Amount remaining = original − − = 1 − − = .
- 4. of savings = £175, so total savings = £175 ÷ () = £175 × = £420.
£420
- M1: correctly identifies the remaining fraction after phone purchase as .
- M1: correctly calculates of = (accept any equivalent fraction).
- M1: combines fractions to find the fraction remaining is .
- M1: sets up £175 = × total (or inverse: total = 175 ÷ ()).
- A1: £420.
Calculating headphone cost as of the original savings (forgetting 'of what remains'), which gives the wrong remaining fraction.
Grade 9 stretchproblem solvingA fraction has numerator n and denominator (n + 4). When 3 is added to the numerator, the fraction equals . When 2 is added to the denominator, the fraction equals . Find the original fraction and show it satisfies both conditions.
6 marks6 minsfrac-g9Show solution
A fraction has numerator n and denominator (n + 4). When 3 is added to the numerator, the fraction equals . When 2 is added to the denominator, the fraction equals . Find the original fraction and show it satisfies both conditions.
- 1.Condition 1: (n + 3)/(n + 4) = . Cross-multiply: 5(n + 3) = 4(n + 4).
- 2.Expand: 5n + 15 = 4n + 16, so n = 1.
- 3.Original fraction: .
- 4.Check condition 2: 1/(5 + 2) = . But ≠ .
- 5.Condition 2: n/(n + 4 + 2) = → n/(n + 6) = . Cross-multiply: 2n = n + 6, so n = 6.
- 6.Using n = 6: fraction = = . Check condition 1: (6+3)/(6+4) = ≠ .
- 7.The two conditions give different values of n, so no single fraction satisfies both simultaneously.This is the key insight: show the algebra for each and state the contradiction.
Condition 1 alone gives n = 1, original fraction . Condition 2 alone gives n = 6, original fraction . No single fraction satisfies both — demonstrating the importance of checking all constraints.
- M1: forms equation from condition 1 with correct cross-multiplication.
- M1: correctly expands and solves to obtain n = 1.
- M1: forms equation from condition 2 with correct cross-multiplication.
- M1: correctly solves condition 2 to obtain n = 6.
- A1: states original fraction from condition 1 as with correct check, or from condition 2 as with correct check.
- A1 (communication): explicitly states that both conditions cannot be satisfied simultaneously and explains why.
Solving only one condition, or assuming both conditions must give the same fraction without checking.
Exam Techniqueexam trapWork out ÷ . A student writes: ' ÷ = × = '. Identify the error and give the correct answer.
3 marks3 minsfrac-et1Show solution
Work out ÷ . A student writes: ' ÷ = × = '. Identify the error and give the correct answer.
- 1.The error: when dividing by a fraction, you flip (invert) the second fraction before multiplying.
- 2.The student multiplied by instead of by its reciprocal .
- 3.Correct working: ÷ = × = = .
(or 1 and ). Error: the student did not flip the second fraction — they multiplied instead of multiplying by the reciprocal.
- B1: clearly identifies the specific error (did not take the reciprocal of the divisor).
- M1: correct method shown — × seen.
- A1: correct final answer or 1½ in simplest form.
Simply performing the division again without identifying what went wrong, which scores no marks on an 'identify the error' question.
Hard exam-stylemulti-step problemMia spends of her money on a ticket and of the original amount on food. She has £21 left. How much money did she have at the start?
4 marks6 minsfractions-paperShow solution
Mia spends of her money on a ticket and of the original amount on food. She has £21 left. How much money did she have at the start?
- 1.Find the fraction left after both purchases.
- 2.The fraction left is equal to £21.
- 3.Scale up to find the whole amount.
£60
- M1: use 1 - -
- M1: obtain
- M1: use of the total = 21
- A1: obtain £60
Read the full question before calculating. Keep each stage of your working visible.
Switch between skills
Set a timer and attempt all four questions before opening any answers. This is closer to the way skills appear in a real paper.
1Fractions - 2 marksWork out ⅖ + Mark answer
2Calculations and order of operations - 2 marksWork out (6 + 2) × 3 − 5Mark answer
19
3Integers, decimals and place value - 2 marksOrder these from smallest to largest: 0.3, 0.03, 0.303, 0.033Mark answer
0.03, 0.033, 0.3, 0.303
4Converting decimals, fractions and percentages - 3 marksA student scores 36 out of 48. Write this as a percentage.Mark answer
75%
- I can recall what numerator, denominator, equivalent fraction and reciprocal mean, and use each term precisely in written explanations.
- I can simplify any fraction to its lowest terms by identifying and dividing by the highest common factor.
- I can add, subtract, multiply and divide two fractions, showing every step including the common denominator or reciprocal used.
- I can solve a two-step problem in context (such as fractions of amounts or reverse fraction problems) by identifying the correct operation at each stage.
- I can apply fraction skills in an unfamiliar multi-step setting — such as finding an original amount from a remaining fraction — and verify my answer by working forward through the problem.
This guide follows the AQA GCSE Mathematics 8300 specification. Practice questions are original Learnova questions shaped around official content and exam skills.