How to Simplify Exponents
Pennpaper Team
Exponents are a shorthand for repeated multiplication. The rules help you simplify expressions without writing every factor.
Quick idea
Exponent rules work because powers count how many repeated factors are being multiplied.
Steps
- When multiplying powers with the same base, add exponents.
- When dividing powers with the same base, subtract exponents.
- When raising a power to another power, multiply exponents.
- Rewrite negative exponents as reciprocals.
Worked example
Simplify x to the third times x to the fourth.
Full solution
Step-by-step walkthrough
Step 1
Both powers have the same base, x.
Step 2
Add the exponents 3 and 4.
Step 3
The result is x to the seventh.
Common mistake
Only add exponents when the bases are the same and the operation is multiplication.
Practice problems
- Simplify x^2 x^5.
- Simplify y^8 / y^3.
- Simplify (a^4)^2.
Answers
- x^7
- y^5
- a^8
Ask Pennpaper to explain it live
If the steps make sense but you still feel stuck, start a Pennpaper lesson and ask the tutor to draw the problem on the whiteboard. Seeing the symbols move step by step is often what makes the concept click.