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Place Value and Rounding — Charts, Rules, and Practice

Grade: 6 | Topic: Arithmetic

What You Will Learn

Understanding place value is the foundation for reading, writing, comparing, and rounding numbers. In this guide you will learn the place value chart from ones all the way up to millions (and down to thousandths on the decimal side), how to read and write large numbers, and the step-by-step rules for rounding both whole numbers and decimals.

Theory

The place value chart

Every digit in a number has a value determined by its position. Moving left, each place is 10 times larger. Moving right, each place is 10 times smaller.

MillionsHundred-thousandsTen-thousandsThousandsHundredsTensOnes.TenthsHundredthsThousandths
1,000,000100,00010,0001,000100101.0.10.010.001

For the number 3,405,278:

  • 3 is in the millions place: value = 3,000,000
  • 4 is in the hundred-thousands place: value = 400,000
  • 0 is in the ten-thousands place: value = 0
  • 5 is in the thousands place: value = 5,000
  • 2 is in the hundreds place: value = 200
  • 7 is in the tens place: value = 70
  • 8 is in the ones place: value = 8

Reading and writing large numbers

To read a large number, break it into groups of three digits separated by commas, reading each group with its period name:

  • 3,405,2783,405,278 is read as "three million, four hundred five thousand, two hundred seventy-eight."

Expanded form writes each digit multiplied by its place value:

3,405,278=3,000,000+400,000+5,000+200+70+83,405,278 = 3,000,000 + 400,000 + 5,000 + 200 + 70 + 8

Decimal place values

The decimal point separates the whole-number part from the fractional part. Digits to the right of the decimal point represent fractions of one:

For 6.394:

  • 6 is in the ones place
  • 3 is in the tenths place: 310=0.3\frac{3}{10} = 0.3
  • 9 is in the hundredths place: 9100=0.09\frac{9}{100} = 0.09
  • 4 is in the thousandths place: 41000=0.004\frac{4}{1000} = 0.004

Rounding rules

Rounding replaces a number with a simpler nearby value. The steps are always the same:

  1. Identify the place you are rounding to (the "rounding place").
  2. Look at the digit one place to the right (the "decision digit").
  3. Apply the rule:
    • If the decision digit is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4, the rounding-place digit stays the same (round down).
    • If the decision digit is 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9, the rounding-place digit goes up by 1 (round up).
  4. Replace all digits to the right of the rounding place with zeros (for whole numbers) or drop them (for decimals).

Worked Examples

Example 1 — Identifying place value

What is the value of the digit 6 in 462,019462,019?

Step 1: The digit 6 is in the ten-thousands place.

Step 2: Its value is 6×10,000=60,0006 \times 10,000 = 60,000.

Answer: 60,000.

Example 2 — Rounding a whole number to the nearest hundred

Round 3,8473,847 to the nearest hundred.

Step 1: The rounding place is the hundreds digit, which is 88.

Step 2: The decision digit (one place to the right) is 44.

Step 3: Since 4<54 < 5, the hundreds digit stays at 88.

Step 4: Replace digits to the right with zeros: 3,8003,800.

Answer: 3,8473,847 rounded to the nearest hundred is 3,8003,800.

Example 3 — Rounding when the digit rounds up past 9

Round 6,9726,972 to the nearest hundred.

Step 1: The hundreds digit is 99. The decision digit is 77.

Step 2: Since 757 \geq 5, round up. But 9+1=109 + 1 = 10, so the hundreds digit becomes 00 and you carry 11 to the thousands place.

Step 3: The thousands digit was 66, now becomes 77.

Answer: 6,9726,972 rounds to 7,0007,000.

Example 4 — Rounding a decimal

Round 14.36814.368 to the nearest tenth.

Step 1: The tenths digit is 33. The decision digit (hundredths place) is 66.

Step 2: Since 656 \geq 5, round up: 33 becomes 44.

Step 3: Drop everything after the tenths place.

Answer: 14.36814.368 rounded to the nearest tenth is 14.414.4.

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1 — Looking at the wrong digit

❌ To round 4,3624,362 to the nearest hundred, looking at the digit 44 (thousands) instead of 66 (tens).

✅ Always look at the digit one place to the right of the rounding place. The hundreds digit is 33, and the decision digit is 66 (in the tens place). Since 656 \geq 5, round up to 4,4004,400.

Mistake 2 — Forgetting to carry when rounding up past 9

❌ Rounding 2,9502,950 to the nearest hundred gives 2,9002,900 (keeping 9 unchanged because "it is already big").

✅ The decision digit is 55, so round up: 9+1=109 + 1 = 10. Carry the 11, giving 3,0003,000.

Mistake 3 — Adding zeros after a decimal round

❌ Rounding 7.8497.849 to the nearest tenth gives 7.9007.900.

✅ After rounding the tenths digit up to 99, simply write 7.97.9. Do not pad with unnecessary trailing zeros (though 7.907.90 and 7.9007.900 are technically equal, the clean form is 7.97.9).

Practice Problems

Problem 1: What is the place value of the digit 5 in 2,508,3142,508,314?

Show Answer

The digit 5 is in the hundred-thousands place. Its value is 500,000500,000.

Problem 2: Write 7,030,0067,030,006 in words.

Show Answer

Seven million, thirty thousand, six.

Problem 3: Round 8,4658,465 to the nearest thousand.

Show Answer

The thousands digit is 88. The decision digit is 44. Since 4<54 < 5, round down.

8,4658,465 rounds to 8,0008,000.

Problem 4: Round 0.78490.7849 to the nearest hundredth.

Show Answer

The hundredths digit is 88. The decision digit is 44. Since 4<54 < 5, round down.

0.78490.7849 rounds to 0.780.78.

Problem 5: Round 9,9859,985 to the nearest ten.

Show Answer

The tens digit is 88. The decision digit is 55. Since 555 \geq 5, round up: 88 becomes 99, but that makes the ones place 00, giving 9,9909,990.

Wait — let us recheck. The tens digit is 88, decision digit is 55. Round up: tens becomes 99, ones become 00. Result: 9,9909,990.

Summary

  • Place value tells you how much each digit is worth based on its position — each place is 10 times the place to its right.
  • Read large numbers by breaking them into groups of three digits (millions, thousands, ones).
  • Rounding rule: look at the digit one place to the right. If it is 5 or more, round up; if it is 4 or less, round down.
  • When rounding causes a digit to pass 9, carry over to the next place.
  • Rounding decimals follows the same rule — just drop digits instead of replacing with zeros.

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