A rectangle has an area of 20cm^2. Its length and width are each enlarged by scale factor 3. What is the area of the enlarged rectangle?

For questions regarding enlargements of shapes, it's sometimes easier to consider one dimension at a time. So for this example, let's first consider what the area of the rectangle would be if we just enlarged the length by a scale factor of 3. We can do this by multiplying the area by 3:

20cm^2 * 3 = 60cm^2

Now, let's consider enlarging the width of this rectangle by a scale factor of 3:

60cm^2 * 3 = 180cm^2

Notice that we end up multiplying the area of the rectangle by 3^2. The 3 is the scale factor that we're asked to enlarge by, and the 2 is the number of dimensions that we are enlarging the shape in.

SW
Answered by Sophie W. Maths tutor

9638 Views

See similar Maths GCSE tutors

Related Maths GCSE answers

All answers ▸

How do you convert fractions to decimals? For example. Convert 13/20 to a decimal.


Question: What proportion of the clock is the area covered when the time is 12:10? (Here the question should indicate the time stated and shade in the proportion of the clock to be computed.)


Factorise 3xy+6x^2


Solve the simultaneous equations: 3y + 2x = 10, 4x - y + 3 = 2


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2026 by IXL Learning