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Area and Perimeter — Quick Reference Cheatsheet

A focused companion to the main Area and Perimeter topic page on ACT Math.

ACT Math Plane Geometry One-page reference

This is a one-page reference for Area and Perimeter on the ACT math section. Compute the area and perimeter of triangles, quadrilaterals and composite shapes. Use it as a printable cheatsheet before test day, or as a refresher right before you attempt the worked questions on the main Area and Perimeter topic page.

What this topic is

A Area and Perimeter question tests triangles, quadrilaterals, circles, and 3-D solids. The ACT gives you NO reference sheet — every formula must be in your head.

Core formulas you must memorise

  • Triangle area: ½ b h
  • Pythagorean: a² + b² = c²
  • Circle: A = πr², C = 2πr
  • Sum of interior angles: (n − 2) · 180°
  • Volume cylinder: πr²h ; sphere: ⁴⁄₃πr³ ; cone: ⅓πr²h

If any of these formulas are not yet automatic, drill them via the Plane Geometry formula sheet. Memorisation is fastest when you write each formula out by hand five times in a row, then quiz yourself the next morning.

How to spot this question type on the test

ACT questions on Area and Perimeter typically present in one of three ways: as a pure symbolic problem ("solve for x"), wrapped in a word problem (a real-world scenario you must translate), or hidden inside a longer multi-step question where Area and Perimeter is just the first or last step. Train yourself to recognise the signature — a particular word, equation form, or diagram — and you will halve your reading time.

The 30-second decision

Always re-draw the diagram on your scratch with all known values labelled. The labelling alone solves a quarter of plane-geometry questions.

If you have 60 seconds before the question

Glance at the answer choices first. If they are widely spaced, estimate; if they are close, you must be exact. Sketch any diagram involved. Identify which of the formulas above applies. Then attempt — and if you cannot finish in 90 seconds, mark and move on. There is no penalty for guessing on either the SAT or the ACT, so always bubble in.

Drill set

Re-attempt the six worked Area and Perimeter questions with this cheatsheet open. Then close it and re-attempt them from memory. If you can solve all six without peeking, this topic is locked in.

Related study material

For broader test-prep tactics, see our Area and Perimeter strategy guide. For category-wide context, browse all Plane Geometry topics. For score-targeted study plans, see the score-band guides.