Stage 15 · Triangles

15.5  Isosceles Triangles

Two equal sides force two equal angles — and three special lines collapse into one.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 15.5.2 Equal sides face equal angles — the Base Angles Theorem

15.5.2 Equal sides face equal angles — the Base Angles Theorem

Once the triangle can fold onto itself, the two base angles have nowhere to hide: the fold carries ∠B exactly onto ∠C, so they must be equal. This is the most-used fact about isosceles triangles.

Base Angles Theorem

If a triangle has two equal sides, then the angles opposite those sides are equal. In symbols: if AB = AC, then ∠B = ∠C.

We can prove it without any folding, using congruence from Lesson 15.3. Drop the bisector of the apex angle to the point M where it meets the base, and compare the two halves:

StatementReason
AB = ACGiven (the two legs)
∠BAM = ∠CAMAM bisects the apex angle
AM = AMCommon side (shared by both halves)
△ABM ≅ △ACMSAS
∠B = ∠CMatching parts of congruent triangles

The two half-triangles are perfect copies, so all their matching parts agree — and in particular the base angles ∠B = ∠C. Reasoned out loud, the conclusion line is simply: “AB = AC, so ∠B = ∠C (base angles of an isosceles triangle).”

The bisector AM splits △ABC into two congruent halves △ABM ≅ △ACM (SAS). Matching parts then force the base angles equal.
Try it Equal legs, equal base angles
Raise or lower the apex. The legs stay equal by construction — watch the two base angles stay equal too, however tall the triangle gets.
Apex height
Worked example

An isosceles triangle has apex angle ∠A = 40°. The three angles total 180°, and the two base angles are equal, so each base angle is (180° − 40°) ÷ 2 = 70°.

eastmath.com · 15.5 Isosceles Triangles · 15.5.2 Equal sides face equal angles — the Base Angles Theorem