Distributive Property — Expand and Factor with Examples
Grade: 6-7 | Topic: Algebra
What You Will Learn
The distributive property is one of the most-used rules in all of algebra. It lets you remove parentheses from an expression by multiplying, and it lets you factor common pieces out. This guide covers expanding brackets with positive and negative numbers, factoring out the greatest common factor, and handling expressions with multiple sets of parentheses.
Theory
The core rule
The distributive property says that multiplying a number by a group of terms added together is the same as multiplying the number by each term separately and then adding:
This works because multiplication "distributes" over addition. Think of it like handing out — the gets handed to every term inside the parentheses.
Concrete example: Suppose you buy 3 packs, each containing 4 pencils and 2 erasers.
You get the same answer either way: .
With subtraction
Subtraction is just adding a negative, so the property works the same way:
With negative factors
When the factor outside the parentheses is negative, remember that a negative times a positive is negative, and a negative times a negative is positive:
Factoring — the reverse direction
Factoring means rewriting an expression by pulling out a common factor. It is the distributive property used in reverse:
To factor an expression:
- Find the greatest common factor (GCF) of all terms.
- Divide each term by the GCF.
- Write the GCF outside and the divided terms inside parentheses.
For example, factor :
- GCF of and is .
- and .
- Result: .
Worked Examples
Example 1 — Basic expansion
Expand .
Step 1: Multiply by : .
Step 2: Multiply by : .
Step 3: Combine: .
Example 2 — Negative factor
Expand .
Step 1: .
Step 2: (negative times negative is positive).
Step 3: Combine: .
Example 3 — Two sets of brackets, then combine
Simplify .
Step 1: Distribute the first bracket: .
Step 2: Distribute the second bracket: .
Step 3: Combine all terms: .
Step 4: Combine like terms: .
Example 4 — Factoring with variables
Factor .
Step 1: Find the GCF of and .
- GCF of and is .
- Both terms contain at least one .
- GCF is .
Step 2: Divide each term: and .
Step 3: Write the result: .
Check: . Correct.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1 — Forgetting to distribute to every term
❌
✅ — the must multiply both and .
Mistake 2 — Sign errors with a negative factor
❌
✅ — negative times negative gives positive .
Mistake 3 — Not finding the greatest common factor
❌ Factor :
✅ — while is technically correct, you should always factor out the GCF, which is here, not just .
Practice Problems
Problem 1: Expand .
Show Answer
Problem 2: Expand .
Show Answer
Problem 3: Simplify .
Show Answer
Distribute: .
Combine: .
Problem 4: Factor .
Show Answer
GCF of and is .
Problem 5: Factor .
Show Answer
GCF of and is .
Summary
- The distributive property states — multiply the outside factor by every term inside.
- It works with subtraction and negative numbers — just be careful with signs.
- Factoring is the reverse: find the GCF of all terms and write it outside parentheses.
- After distributing, always combine like terms to finish simplifying.
- This property is the gateway to solving equations, working with polynomials, and simplifying complex expressions.
Related Topics
- Combining Like Terms — simplify after distributing
- Variables and Expressions — foundational algebra vocabulary
- Solving Two-Step Equations — apply distribution to solve equations
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