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Learn to use V = l × w × h and V = B × h to measure how much space a box-shaped object holds.
Have you ever wondered how people figured out how much water fits inside a swimming pool, or how many blocks can fill up a box? That question — how much space something takes up — is what volume is all about. People have been measuring volume for thousands of years!
The big question that these early thinkers were trying to answer is the same one we'll answer today: How can we calculate the exact amount of space inside a rectangular box without filling it up with water? The answer is a simple formula — and you're about to learn it!
Before we jump into the formulas, let's make sure we understand four important building blocks. These are the ideas that make volume make sense.
Let's look at a rectangular prism that is 5 units long, 3 units wide, and 4 units tall. The diagram below shows how unit cubes fill up the inside of this shape. Each small cube is 1 × 1 × 1.
Look at the diagram above. The front face of the prism shows a grid of 5 cubes across and 4 cubes tall — that's 5 × 4 = 20 cubes you can see. But the box also goes back 3 cubes deep. So you have 3 layers of 20 cubes, which is 20 × 3 = 60 cubes total. That's the volume: 60 cubic units!
There are two ways to write the formula for the volume of a rectangular prism. Don't worry — they both give the same answer! They're just two ways of thinking about the same thing.
This formula says: multiply the length times the width times the height. Just three numbers multiplied together! Each measurement must be in the same units (all inches, all centimeters, etc.).
This formula says: first find the area of the base (the bottom rectangle), then multiply that by the height. The base area B is just length × width, so this is really the same math as Formula 1 — it's just split into two steps instead of one.
Here's why Formula 2 is helpful: it reminds you that you can think of volume as stacking layers. Each layer has an area of B, and you stack h layers on top of each other. Like stacking pancakes!
Let's look at how the V = B × h formula works step by step with a visual. We'll use a prism that is 4 units long, 2 units wide, and 3 units tall.
See how it works? The bottom layer has 8 unit cubes (that's the base area, B = 4 × 2 = 8). We then stack 3 layers on top of each other (that's the height, h = 3). The total is 8 × 3 = 24 cubic units.
Here's a helpful table showing different rectangular prisms and their volumes:
| Length (l) | Width (w) | Height (h) | Base Area (B = l × w) | Volume (V) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 2 | 4 | 3 × 2 = 6 | 6 × 4 = 24 cubic units |
| 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 × 5 = 25 | 25 × 5 = 125 cubic units |
| 10 | 4 | 2 | 10 × 4 = 40 | 40 × 2 = 80 cubic units |
| 6 | 3 | 7 | 6 × 3 = 18 | 18 × 7 = 126 cubic units |
| 8 | 1 | 9 | 8 × 1 = 8 | 8 × 9 = 72 cubic units |
Notice something cool: the order you multiply doesn't change the answer! For the first row, 3 × 2 × 4 = 24, and if you rearranged it to 4 × 3 × 2, you'd still get 24. That's because multiplication is commutative — you can multiply in any order.
Let's solve a complete problem together, step by step. Read carefully and follow along!
V = l × w × h. We could also use V = B × h — both work. We'll try both to show they give the same answer.V = 12 × 8 × 10. First, 12 × 8 = 96. Then, 96 × 10 = 960.B = l × w = 12 × 8 = 96 square inches. Now multiply by height: V = B × h = 96 × 10 = 960. Same answer! ✓Both formulas find the same volume. So when should you use each one? Here's a comparison to help you decide.
| Feature | V = l × w × h | V = B × h |
|---|---|---|
| Number of steps | One step — multiply all three numbers at once | Two steps — find B first, then multiply by h |
| Best when… | You know all three edge lengths right away | You already know the base area, or the base area is given to you |
| Helps you understand… | That volume comes from three dimensions | That volume is like stacking layers |
| Works for other shapes? | Only for rectangular prisms | Yes! V = B × h works for ANY prism (triangular, hexagonal, etc.) |
| Example | V = 6 × 4 × 3 = 72 | B = 6 × 4 = 24, then V = 24 × 3 = 72 |
Now that you've learned how to find the volume of a rectangular prism, you're building a strong foundation for more advanced math. Here's a peek at where this knowledge leads.
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Later |
|---|---|
| V = l × w × h for rectangular prisms | Volume formulas for triangular prisms, cylinders, cones, and spheres |
| Whole-number edge lengths only | Volume with fractions and decimals (like 3.5 × 2.25 × 4) |
| Finding volume when all sides are given | Working backwards — finding a missing side when volume is given |
| Volume in cubic units | Converting between units (cubic inches to cubic feet, liters, etc.) |
The formula V = B × h is especially powerful because it works for any prism — not just rectangular ones. In later grades, you'll use the same idea with triangular bases, circular bases (cylinders), and more. So by learning this formula well now, you're setting yourself up for success!
You'll also start combining volume with other measurement ideas. For example, if you know the volume of a swimming pool and how fast the water flows in, you can figure out how long it takes to fill. Math builds on itself, and volume is one of the most useful building blocks.
Try these five problems on your own. Start each one, then click "Show Answer" to check your work. They get a little harder as you go!
In this lesson, you learned that volume is the amount of space inside a three-dimensional shape, measured in cubic units. A rectangular prism is a box-shaped figure with six rectangular faces. You can find its volume using two formulas: V = l × w × h (multiply length times width times height) or V = B × h (multiply the base area times the height). Both formulas always give the same answer because B is just another way of writing l × w.
You practiced identifying the base area as the area of the bottom rectangle, and you saw how volume works like stacking layers of unit cubes. You solved problems with both formulas, compared two boxes to see which holds more, and even worked backwards to find a missing dimension. These skills with rectangular prisms are the foundation for all the volume work you'll do in middle school and beyond. Keep practicing — every problem makes you stronger!