Stage 9 · Rational Expressions & Equations

9.5  Rational Equations and How to Solve Them

Clear the denominators to escape the fraction — then check for the fake roots it leaves behind.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 9.5.2 Solving by clearing the denominators

9.5.2 Solving by clearing the denominators

Here's the whole trick. Fractions are awkward to solve with, so we get rid of them. Multiply both sides of the equation by the LCD — the least common denominator of every fraction in sight. Each denominator cancels, and what's left is an ordinary polynomial equation (linear or quadratic) that you already know how to crush.

Worked example — a linear result

Solve 2x = 3x+1. The denominators are x and x+1, so the LCD is x(x+1). Multiply both sides by it:

x(x+1) · 2 x = x(x+1) · 3 x+1 2(x+1) = 3x 2x + 2 = 3x x = 2 check: 2/2 = 1 and 3/3 = 1 ✓
The denominators cancel when you multiply by the LCD, leaving a plain linear equation. The candidate x = 2 isn't on the no‑go list (0, −1), so it survives the check.

Worked example — a quadratic result

Solve xx+2 = 3x−2. The off‑limits values are x = −2 and x = 2. The LCD is (x+2)(x−2); multiply both sides and the bottoms vanish:

x(x−2) = 3(x+2) → x²−2x = 3x+6 → x² − 5x − 6 = 0 → (x−6)(x+1) = 0

So the candidates are x = 6 and x = −1. Neither is on the no‑go list, so both are real solutions. (Quick check: 68 = 34 ✓, and −11 = −1 = 3−3 ✓.)

Watch the trap

You must multiply every single term by the LCD — including any plain number or polynomial that isn't a fraction. Forget the "+ 1" or the "2" on one side and the whole equation tips out of balance. (More on this in 9.5.4.)

🎮 Try itCLEAR‑THE‑DENOMINATORS STEPPER

Pick an equation, then step through it one move at a time: find the LCD, clear the bottoms, solve.

Equation:
eastmath.com · 9.5 Rational Equations and How to Solve Them · 9.5.2 Solving by clearing the denominators