Surface Area of 3D Shapes — Prisms, Cylinders, and More
Grade: 8-9 | Topic: Geometry
What You Will Learn
After this lesson you will be able to calculate the total surface area of the most common 3D shapes: rectangular prisms (boxes), triangular prisms, cylinders, pyramids, cones, and spheres. You will understand the difference between lateral area and total surface area, and apply these formulas to real-world wrapping, painting, and construction problems.
Theory
What is surface area?
The surface area (SA) of a 3D shape is the total area of all the surfaces that form the outside of the shape. Imagine unfolding or "unwrapping" the shape into a flat pattern (called a net) — the surface area is the combined area of every piece in that net.
Surface area is measured in square units (cm, m, ft) because it measures area, not volume.
Total vs. lateral surface area
- Total surface area includes every face — top, bottom, and sides.
- Lateral surface area includes only the sides (no top or bottom bases).
Many problems ask specifically for one or the other, so always read carefully.
Rectangular prism (box)
A rectangular prism has three pairs of identical rectangular faces. If the length is , width is , and height is :
This accounts for the top/bottom (), front/back (), and left/right sides ().
Lateral area (sides only, no top/bottom):
For example, a box that is 5 cm by 4 cm by 3 cm:
Cube
A cube is a special rectangular prism where :
Triangular prism
A triangular prism has two identical triangular bases and three rectangular side faces. If the triangular base has sides , , and area , and the prism has length (depth) :
The term is the lateral area — the perimeter of the base multiplied by the length.
Cylinder
A cylinder has two circular bases and a curved lateral surface. If you unroll the curved surface, it becomes a rectangle with width (the circumference) and height :
- = area of the two circular bases
- = lateral (curved) surface area
For example, a cylinder with radius 3 cm and height 10 cm:
Pyramid (square base)
A pyramid with a square base of side and a slant height (the distance from the base edge to the apex along the face):
- = base area
- = lateral area (four triangular faces, each with area , totaling )
Cone
A cone has a circular base and a curved lateral surface:
where is the radius and is the slant height. If you are given the vertical height instead, find the slant height using the Pythagorean theorem:
Sphere
A sphere has no edges or bases — just one curved surface:
This formula says the surface area of a sphere is exactly four times the area of a circle with the same radius.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Surface area of a rectangular prism (easy)
Problem: A box is 8 cm long, 6 cm wide, and 4 cm tall. Find its total surface area.
Step 1: Identify the dimensions. , , .
Step 2: Apply the formula.
Step 3: Calculate each term.
Answer: 208 cm
Example 2: Surface area of a cylinder (easy)
Problem: A tin can has a radius of 5 cm and a height of 12 cm. Find its total surface area. Use .
Step 1: Calculate the base areas.
Step 2: Calculate the lateral area.
Step 3: Add them together.
Answer: 533.8 cm
Example 3: Surface area of a triangular prism (medium)
Problem: A triangular prism has a right-triangular base with legs 3 cm and 4 cm (hypotenuse 5 cm). The prism is 10 cm long. Find the total surface area.
Step 1: Find the area of the triangular base.
Step 2: Find the lateral area using the base perimeter.
Step 3: Calculate total surface area.
Answer: 132 cm
Example 4: Surface area of a cone (medium)
Problem: A cone has a radius of 6 cm and a vertical height of 8 cm. Find its total surface area. Use .
Step 1: Find the slant height using the Pythagorean theorem.
Step 2: Calculate the base area.
Step 3: Calculate the lateral area.
Step 4: Add them together.
Answer: 301.44 cm
Example 5: Surface area of a sphere — painting a dome (challenging)
Problem: A hemispherical dome has a diameter of 14 m. A painter needs to paint the curved outer surface (not the flat base). How many square metres must be painted? If one litre of paint covers 10 m, how many litres are needed? Use .
Step 1: Find the radius.
Step 2: The curved surface area of a hemisphere is half the surface area of a full sphere.
Step 3: Calculate litres of paint needed.
Answer: Curved area = 307.72 m, Paint needed = 31 litres
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Confusing surface area with volume
❌ "Surface area of a box = " (this is volume)
✅ Surface area of a box =
Why this matters: Volume measures three-dimensional space (in cubic units). Surface area measures the two-dimensional skin of the object (in square units). Multiplying all three dimensions gives volume, not surface area.
Mistake 2: Forgetting to include all faces
❌ For a cylinder, only calculating the lateral area:
✅ Total SA includes the two circular bases too:
Why this matters: A closed cylinder has three surfaces — the curved wall and two circular lids. Forgetting the bases underestimates the surface area. (Note: if the problem says "open-top cylinder," then you subtract one base.)
Mistake 3: Using vertical height instead of slant height for cones and pyramids
❌ Cone lateral area with vertical height:
✅ Use slant height: . Lateral area:
Why this matters: The lateral surface of a cone unfolds into a sector of a circle. The radius of that sector is the slant height, not the vertical height. Using the wrong height gives a smaller (incorrect) answer.
Practice Problems
Try these on your own before checking the answers:
- A rectangular prism is 10 cm by 7 cm by 5 cm. Find its total surface area.
- A cube has a side length of 9 m. Find its surface area.
- A cylinder has a radius of 4 cm and a height of 15 cm. Find the total surface area. (Use .)
- A cone has a radius of 3 cm and a slant height of 7 cm. Find the total surface area. (Use .)
- A basketball has a diameter of 24 cm. Find its surface area. (Use .)
Click to see answers
- cm.
- m.
- cm.
- Base: cm. Lateral: cm. Total: cm.
- cm. cm.
Summary
- Surface area is the total area of all outer faces of a 3D shape, measured in square units.
- Rectangular prism: . Cube: .
- Cylinder: (two bases + curved wall).
- Cone: (use slant height, not vertical height).
- Sphere: .
- Always check whether a problem asks for total surface area (all faces) or lateral surface area (sides only).
Related Topics
- Area and Perimeter — Formulas, Examples, and Practice
- Area and Circumference of a Circle — Formulas and Examples
- Pythagorean Theorem — Formula, Proof, and Examples
Need help with surface area problems?
Take a photo of your math problem and MathPal will solve it step by step.