Perimeter & Area Scaling

GCSE Geometry scale factor similarity
\( P' = kP,\qquad A' = k^{2}A \)

Statement

When a 2D shape is scaled by a scale factor \(k\):

  • The perimeter is multiplied by \(k\): \(\; P' = kP\).
  • The area is multiplied by \(k^2\): \(\; A' = k^2A\).

Why it’s true

  • All side lengths scale directly with the scale factor \(k\), so the perimeter (sum of sides) scales by \(k\).
  • The area is proportional to the square of lengths (since area involves two dimensions), so the area scales by \(k^2\).

Recipe (how to use it)

  1. Identify the scale factor \(k\).
  2. To find new perimeter: multiply old perimeter by \(k\).
  3. To find new area: multiply old area by \(k^2\).

Spotting it

This appears in enlargement problems, similarity questions, and exam questions about ratios of areas and perimeters.

Common pairings

  • Similar triangles, rectangles, or polygons.
  • Circle scaling (perimeter = circumference, area = πr²).
  • Maps, models, and real-life enlargements or reductions.

Mini examples

  1. Given: A square has perimeter 40. Enlarged by scale factor 3. Answer: New perimeter = \(3 \times 40 = 120\).
  2. Given: Rectangle has area 20. Enlarged by scale factor 4. Answer: New area = \(4^2 \times 20 = 320\).

Pitfalls

  • Forgetting to square the scale factor for area.
  • Confusing perimeter and area scaling rules.
  • Mixing up ratios of sides with ratios of areas.

Exam strategy

  • Always check whether the question is about perimeter or area.
  • Write down \(P' = kP\) and \(A' = k^2A\) explicitly to avoid mistakes.
  • If a question gives you ratios of areas, take the square root to find the scale factor.

Summary

Under enlargement by a scale factor \(k\), perimeters scale by \(k\) and areas scale by \(k^2\). This is essential in similarity and enlargement problems.