Skip to main content

Multi-Step Word Problems — Strategies and Examples

Grade: 6-7 | Topic: Arithmetic

What You Will Learn

Multi-step word problems are the bridge between pure arithmetic and real-world reasoning. This guide teaches you a clear strategy for identifying sub-questions hidden inside a longer problem and solving each one systematically — so you never get lost partway through.

Theory

The 4-step strategy

Step 1 — Read: Read the whole problem once without calculating. Identify:

  • What is given (the facts)?
  • What is asked (the final question)?

Step 2 — Plan: Identify the sub-questions you need to answer before you can reach the final answer. Write these down as mini-steps.

Step 3 — Solve: Work through each sub-question in order. Show each calculation clearly. Keep track of units.

Step 4 — Check: Does the answer make sense? Re-read the question and verify your answer addresses exactly what was asked.

Key word signals

Key wordLikely operation
total, sum, altogether, combinedAddition
difference, left, remaining, fewerSubtraction
each, per, times, productMultiplication
shared equally, split, per person, dividedDivision
fraction of, percentage ofMultiplication by a fraction or decimal
how much more/lessSubtraction, then compare

Handling units

Always track units (dollars, metres, kg, hours) throughout your working. If you multiply metres by metres you get square metres — check this matches what the question asks for.

Worked Examples

Example 1 — Shopping problem

Lena buys 3 notebooks for $2.50 each and 2 pens for $1.80 each. She pays with a $20 note. How much change does she receive?

Sub-question 1: Cost of notebooks = 3×2.50=7.503 \times 2.50 = 7.50

Sub-question 2: Cost of pens = 2×1.80=3.602 \times 1.80 = 3.60

Sub-question 3: Total cost = 7.50+3.60=11.107.50 + 3.60 = 11.10

Sub-question 4: Change = 20.0011.10=8.9020.00 - 11.10 = 8.90

Answer: Lena receives $8.90 change.

Example 2 — Distance and time

A car travels 180 km in 2 hours, then travels another 120 km in 1.5 hours. What is the average speed for the whole journey?

Sub-question 1: Total distance = 180+120=300180 + 120 = 300 km

Sub-question 2: Total time = 2+1.5=3.52 + 1.5 = 3.5 hours

Sub-question 3: Average speed = 3003.585.7\dfrac{300}{3.5} \approx 85.7 km/h

Answer: The average speed is approximately 85.7 km/h.

Example 3 — Fractions and whole numbers

A bag of rice weighs 5 kg. A family uses 34\dfrac{3}{4} of the bag in a month. How many grams are left?

Sub-question 1: Amount used = 5×34=154=3.755 \times \dfrac{3}{4} = \dfrac{15}{4} = 3.75 kg

Sub-question 2: Amount remaining = 53.75=1.255 - 3.75 = 1.25 kg

Sub-question 3: Convert to grams = 1.25×1000=12501.25 \times 1000 = 1250 g

Answer: There are 1,250 g of rice left.

Example 4 — Percentages and money

A jacket originally costs $80. It is first discounted by 20%, then an 8% sales tax is added. What is the final price?

Sub-question 1: Discount amount = 80×0.20=1680 \times 0.20 = 16

Sub-question 2: Price after discount = 8016=6480 - 16 = 64

Sub-question 3: Tax amount = 64×0.08=5.1264 \times 0.08 = 5.12

Sub-question 4: Final price = 64+5.12=69.1264 + 5.12 = 69.12

Answer: The final price is $69.12.

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1 — Answering a sub-question instead of the final question

❌ In Example 1, stopping after calculating the total cost ($11.10) instead of finding the change.

✅ Always re-read the question after each step. The last step must match exactly what was asked.

Mistake 2 — Applying the percentage to the wrong amount

❌ In Example 4, calculating 8% tax on $80 (the original price) rather than on the discounted price of $64.

✅ Operations must be applied in the correct order. Discount first, then tax on the reduced price.

Mistake 3 — Mixing units

❌ Adding 1.25 kg + 500 g = 1.75 (wrong units).

✅ Convert all quantities to the same unit before combining: 1.25 kg = 1250 g, then 1250 + 500 = 1750 g.

Practice Problems

Problem 1: A cinema sells adult tickets for $14 and child tickets for $9. A family buys 2 adult and 3 child tickets. They have a voucher worth $10. How much do they pay?

Show Answer

Adults: 2×14=2 \times 14 = $28. Children: 3×9=3 \times 9 = $27. Total before voucher: $55. After voucher: $55 - $10 = $45.

Problem 2: A factory produces 450 items per hour. It runs 8 hours a day. Defective items make up 2% of production. How many non-defective items are produced per day?

Show Answer

Total per day: 450×8=3600450 \times 8 = 3600. Defective: 3600×0.02=723600 \times 0.02 = 72. Non-defective: 360072=35283600 - 72 = \mathbf{3528}.

Problem 3: Tom earns $15/hour and works 6 hours on Saturday and 4.5 hours on Sunday. He spends 13\dfrac{1}{3} of his earnings on food. How much money does he have left?

Show Answer

Total hours: 6+4.5=10.56 + 4.5 = 10.5. Earnings: 10.5×15=157.5010.5 \times 15 = 157.50. Food: 157.50×13=52.50157.50 \times \frac{1}{3} = 52.50. Left: 157.5052.50=105157.50 - 52.50 = 105. $105

Problem 4: A swimming pool is 50 m long, 25 m wide, and 2 m deep. Water fills 34\frac{3}{4} of the pool. How many litres of water are in the pool? (1 m³ = 1000 litres)

Show Answer

Full volume: 50×25×2=250050 \times 25 \times 2 = 2500 m³. Filled volume: 2500×34=18752500 \times \frac{3}{4} = 1875 m³. In litres: 1875×1000=1,875,0001875 \times 1000 = \mathbf{1{,}875{,}000} litres.

Summary

  • Multi-step problems contain hidden sub-questions — identify them before calculating.
  • Use the 4-step strategy: Read → Plan → Solve → Check.
  • Key words signal the operation: total = add, difference = subtract, each = multiply, split = divide.
  • Always track units and apply operations in the correct order.
  • Re-read the question at the end to confirm your final answer addresses what was asked.

Need help with word problems? Take a photo of your math problem and MathPal will solve it step by step. Open MathPal