Stage 4 · Ratios, Proportion & Percentages

4.2  Proportion: When Two Ratios Are Equal

A proportion says two ratios match — and that one fact gives you a tool for testing, solving, and reading any map.

For ages 10–12 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 4 in this lesson: 4.2.3 Solving a proportion for an unknown

4.2.3 Solving a proportion for an unknown

Here is where the cross-product property earns its keep. Suppose a proportion has three terms you know and one you do not — call the unknown x. Because the cross products must be equal, you get a simple equation with only one unknown, and you can solve it.

Take 34 = x20. Cross-multiply: the diagonal 3·20 must equal the diagonal 4·x. So

3 · 20 = 4 · x   →   60 = 4x   →   x = 604 = 15

A short way to remember it: x equals the product of the two terms on the unknown's diagonal opposite, divided by the lone known term beside x. In ab = xd the cross products give a·d = b·x, so x = a·d ÷ b.

Worked example — x in a different position

Solve 5x = 824. Here x is a denominator. Cross-multiply on the diagonals: 5·24 = x·8. So 120 = 8x, which gives x = 120 ÷ 8 = 15.

Check by cross-multiplying the finished proportion 515 = 824:  5·24 = 120 and 15·8 = 120. They match.

The answer need not be a whole number

Cross-multiplying always works, but sometimes the division does not come out even. 34 = x10 gives 3·10 = 4x, so x = 30 ÷ 4 = 7.5 (that is 152). A non-whole answer is perfectly fine — just leave it as a fraction or a decimal.

🎮 Try itSolve a proportion for x

Choose which slot holds the unknown x, set the three known terms, and watch the cross-multiplication solve it step by step. Non-whole answers appear as a fraction and a decimal.

x is the
eastmath.com · 4.2 Proportion: When Two Ratios Are Equal · 4.2.3 Solving a proportion for an unknown