The solid shown is a cube. How many faces does it have?
3D Shapes and Nets
3D shapes have length, width and height, while nets show how solids unfold into flat shapes. This topic links closely to surface area, volume and perimeter and area, because understanding faces helps with later calculations.
Overview
A 3D shape is a solid object with length, width and height.
A net is a flat pattern that folds to make a 3D shape.
In exam questions, you are often asked to identify a shape, describe its properties, or decide whether a net can fold into the correct solid.
What you should understand after this topic
- Recognise common 3D shapes
- Understand faces, edges and vertices
- Relate nets to 3D solids
- Decide if a net will fold correctly
- Use shape properties in exam questions
Key Definitions
3D Shape
A solid shape with three dimensions: length, width and height.
Face
A flat or curved surface on a 3D shape.
Edge
The line where two faces meet.
Vertex
A corner where edges meet. The plural is vertices.
Net
A 2D pattern that folds to make a 3D shape.
Cross Section
The shape made when a 3D object is cut straight through.
Key Rules
Count carefully
Faces, edges and vertices must all match the shape.
Curved surfaces are not flat faces
A cylinder and cone include curved surfaces.
A net must fold without overlap
If faces clash or leave gaps, it is not a valid net.
Base shape matters
The base often tells you the name of the prism or pyramid.
Quick Property Guide
Cube
All faces are equal squares.
Cuboid
All faces are rectangles, not necessarily equal.
Prism
Same cross section all the way through.
Pyramid
Faces meet at one top vertex.
How to Solve
Step 1: Identify the solid shape
Start by looking at the faces, edges and vertices. Ask whether the shape has square, rectangular, triangular or circular faces, and check whether it has any curved surfaces.
Step 2: Count faces, edges and vertices
Counting faces, edges and vertices is often the quickest way to confirm the shape.
Cube
6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices
Cuboid
6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices
Cylinder
2 flat circular faces, 1 curved surface, 2 circular edges, 0 vertices
Triangular prism
5 faces, 9 edges, 6 vertices
Step 3: Understand what a net shows
A net is the flat version of a 3D shape before it is folded. Each face in the net becomes a face on the final solid.
Step 4: Check whether the net works
A correct net must:
- have the right number of faces
- have the correct shapes of faces
- fold without overlapping
- close fully with no missing face
Step 5: Link nets to later calculations
Once you understand the faces of a 3D shape, it becomes easier to calculate measurements.
Surface area
Add the area of every face in the net.
Volume
Find the space inside the solid.
Perimeter and area
Use 2D face calculations before moving to 3D calculations.
Example Questions
Edexcel
Exam-style questions focusing on recognising 3D shapes and counting their properties.
The solid shown is a cube.
How many faces does a cube have?
The solid shown is a cuboid.
How many vertices does a cuboid have?
AQA
Exam-style questions focusing on cylinders, cones and matching 3D shapes to their properties.
The 3D shape shown has 2 circular faces and 1 curved surface.
Name the 3D shape.
The 3D shape shown has one circular base and one vertex.
Explain why this shape is a cone.
OCR
Exam-style questions focusing on nets and whether a net folds correctly.
A net is made from 6 equal squares.
Which solid does this net form?
This net has the correct number of square faces, but it may not fold into a cube.
Why might a net with the correct faces still be wrong?
A net contains two circles and one rectangle.
Which 3D shape does this net form?
Exam Checklist
Step 1
Look at the type of faces first.
Step 2
Count faces, edges and vertices carefully.
Step 3
For nets, check the number and shape of the faces.
Step 4
Imagine folding the net to see if it overlaps or leaves a gap.
Most common exam mistakes
Mixing up edges and vertices
Edges are lines, vertices are corners.
Ignoring curved surfaces
Shapes like cones, cylinders and spheres include curved parts.
Assuming every square net works
Not every arrangement folds into a cube.
Not visualising the fold
A valid net must close properly with no overlap.
Common Mistakes
These are common mistakes students make when working with 3D shapes and nets in GCSE Maths.
Confusing edges and vertices
A student says a cube has 8 edges.
A cube has 12 edges and 8 vertices. Edges are the line segments where faces meet, while vertices are the corner points.
Not distinguishing curved and flat surfaces
A student counts the curved surface of a cylinder as a face.
Curved surfaces are not flat faces. A cylinder has 2 flat circular faces and 1 curved surface.
Assuming any layout forms a cube net
A student thinks any arrangement of 6 squares can fold into a cube.
Only specific arrangements of 6 squares form a valid cube net. Some layouts overlap or leave gaps when folded.
Ignoring overlap when folding nets
A net is accepted even though two faces overlap when folded.
A valid net must fold without any faces overlapping. Always visualise or test how the shape folds.
Mixing up cube and cuboid properties
A student says all cuboids have equal edges like a cube.
A cube is a special type of cuboid where all edges are equal. In a general cuboid, edge lengths can be different.
Try It Yourself
Test yourself on shape names, properties and nets.
Foundation Practice
Recognise common 3D shapes, count faces, edges and vertices, and match simple nets.
The solid shown is a cuboid. How many vertices does it have?
Name the 3D shape shown.
The shape shown has one circular base and one vertex. Name the shape.
Which statement describes a sphere?
How many edges does a cube have?
The net shown is made from 6 equal squares. Which solid does it form?
The triangular prism shown has 2 triangular faces and 3 rectangular faces. How many faces does it have altogether?
The solid shown is a square-based pyramid. How many vertices does it have?
A net contains two circles and one rectangle. Which 3D shape does it form?
Higher Practice
Reason about nets, hidden faces, Euler’s formula and properties of prisms and pyramids.
A prism has a pentagonal cross-section. How many faces does it have?
A pentagonal prism has 10 vertices and 7 faces. Use Euler’s formula to find the number of edges.
Which net forms a cylinder?
The prism shown has a hexagonal cross-section. How many faces does a hexagonal prism have?
A square-based pyramid has 5 faces and 5 vertices. How many edges does it have?
A triangular prism has 5 faces and 6 vertices. Use Euler’s formula to find the number of edges.
This arrangement has 6 square faces. Why might it still fail to make a cube?
A cuboid has 6 faces and 8 vertices. Use Euler’s formula to find the number of edges.
Which statement is true for all prisms?
A prism has an octagonal cross-section. How many faces does it have?
Games
Practise this topic with interactive games.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a net?
A flat shape that folds into a 3D object.
What is a vertex?
A point where edges meet.
Why are nets important?
They help calculate surface area.