Systems of Equations — Substitution and Elimination Methods
Grade: 8-9 | Topic: Algebra
What You Will Learn
A system of equations is two or more equations that must be true at the same time. In this guide you will learn to solve a system of two linear equations using three methods — graphing (conceptual overview), substitution, and elimination — and apply these methods to word problems.
Theory
What a solution means
The solution to a system of two equations is the point where both equations are satisfied simultaneously — the intersection of their graphs.
A system can have:
- One solution (the lines intersect at one point) — most common case.
- No solution (the lines are parallel — same slope, different intercepts).
- Infinitely many solutions (the lines are identical).
Method 1 — Substitution
Use substitution when one equation is easily solved for one variable.
Steps:
- Solve one equation for or .
- Substitute that expression into the other equation.
- Solve for the remaining variable.
- Substitute back to find the first variable.
- Check in both original equations.
Method 2 — Elimination (Addition/Subtraction)
Use elimination when the coefficients of one variable can be made equal.
Steps:
- Multiply one or both equations so a variable has equal (and opposite) coefficients.
- Add the equations to eliminate that variable.
- Solve for the remaining variable.
- Substitute back to find the other variable.
- Check in both original equations.
Worked Examples
Example 1 — Substitution method
Solve the system:
Step 1: The first equation already isolates : .
Step 2: Substitute into the second equation:
Step 3: Find : .
Check: ✓.
Solution:
Example 2 — Elimination method
Solve the system:
Step 1: The -coefficients are both 2. Subtract the second equation from the first:
Step 2: Substitute into the second equation: .
Check: ✓ and ✓.
Solution:
Example 3 — Elimination with multiplication
Solve the system:
Step 1: Multiply the second equation by 2 to match the -coefficient:
Step 2: Add to the first equation:
Step 3: Substitute: .
Solution:
Example 4 — Word problem
Two numbers have a sum of 25 and a difference of 7. Find both numbers.
Step 1: Write the system. Let be the larger number and the smaller:
Step 2: Add the equations: .
Step 3: Substitute: .
Answer: The numbers are 16 and 9.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1 — Substituting into the same equation you solved
❌ After solving from equation 1, substituting back into equation 1 to find .
✅ Always substitute into the other equation. Substituting into the same equation gives an identity (e.g., ), not a solution.
Mistake 2 — Sign error when subtracting equations in elimination
❌ : writing but also writing as in the subtraction.
✅ Subtracting an equation means changing the sign of every term: . So the combination gives .
Mistake 3 — Not checking the solution
❌ Stopping after finding and without verifying.
✅ Always substitute both values into both original equations. Both must be satisfied.
Practice Problems
Problem 1: Solve by substitution.
Show Answer
Substitute: .
.
Solution:
Problem 2: Solve by elimination.
Show Answer
Add: . Substitute: .
Solution:
Problem 3: A cinema sold adult tickets for $12 and child tickets for $7. In one session 50 tickets were sold for a total of $460. How many adult and child tickets were sold?
Show Answer
Let = adults, = children.
and .
From the first: . Substitute: .
.
22 adult and 28 child tickets.
Problem 4: Solve by elimination.
Show Answer
Multiply second by 3: . Subtract first: .
.
Solution:
Summary
- A system of equations asks you to find values satisfying two equations simultaneously.
- Substitution: isolate one variable, substitute the expression into the other equation.
- Elimination: add or subtract equations (after scaling) to cancel one variable.
- A system has one solution (intersecting lines), no solution (parallel lines), or infinite solutions (same line).
- Always verify your solution by substituting into both original equations.
Related Topics
- Linear Equations — How to Solve Step by Step — foundational single-equation solving
- How to Graph Linear Equations — see where two lines intersect
- Writing and Solving Equations from Word Problems — setting up systems from real-world scenarios
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