Mental Math Tricks¶
The Observatory Almanac â Section 19
Every trick here can be learned in about 30 seconds. The goal isn't to replace a calculator â it's to develop numerical intuition: the ability to estimate, check, and sanity-test numbers in your head. That skill is worth more than memorizing multiplication tables.
How to Build These Skills¶
- Read the trick â understand the why, not just the how
- Do 3 examples â immediate practice locks it in
- Use it in real life â the next bill, the next purchase, the next calculation
- Don't use a calculator for small things â that's where practice happens
Part 1: Multiplication Tricks¶
Multiplying by 11 (any two-digit number)¶
The trick: For any two-digit number AB, the result is A, (A+B), B â except when A+B ⥠10, where you carry.
Examples: - 11 Ã 23: digits are 2 and 3. Middle = 2+3=5. Answer: 253 - 11 Ã 45: digits are 4 and 5. Middle = 4+5=9. Answer: 495 - 11 Ã 68: digits are 6 and 8. Middle = 6+8=14. Write 4, carry 1. So: 6+1=7, 4, 8 â 748
Why it works: 11 Ã AB = 10ÃAB + AB = the original number shifted plus itself, which creates that middle-digit effect.
Practice: 11Ã34, 11Ã72, 11Ã85, 11Ã99
Squaring Numbers Ending in 5¶
The trick: Take the tens digit, multiply it by the next number up, then append 25.
Examples: - 35² â 3 à 4 = 12 â append 25 â 1,225 - 65² â 6 à 7 = 42 â append 25 â 4,225 - 85² â 8 à 9 = 72 â append 25 â 7,225 - 15² â 1 à 2 = 2 â append 25 â 225
Why it works: (10n+5)² = 100n² + 100n + 25 = 100n(n+1) + 25. The 100n(n+1) part is nÃ(n+1) with two zeros, and you add 25.
Practice: 25², 45², 75², 95², 105²
Multiplying Any Number by 9¶
Trick 1 (by 9): Multiply by 10, then subtract the original number. - 9 Ã 47 = 470 â 47 = 423 - 9 Ã 83 = 830 â 83 = 747
Trick 2 (digit sum check): The digits of any multiple of 9 always sum to 9 (or a multiple of 9). Use this to verify answers. - 423: 4+2+3 = 9 â
Multiplying by 5¶
Divide by 2, then multiply by 10 (or just divide by 2 and move the decimal).
- 5 Ã 46 = 46/2 Ã 10 = 23 Ã 10 = 230
- 5 Ã 73 = 73/2 = 36.5 Ã 10 = 365
- 5 Ã 128 = 128/2 Ã 10 = 64 Ã 10 = 640
Multiplying by 4¶
Double it, then double it again.
- 4 Ã 23 = 23Ã2 = 46 â 46Ã2 = 92
- 4 Ã 37 = 37Ã2 = 74 â 74Ã2 = 148
Multiplying Two Numbers Near 100¶
The trick (Vedic: Base Method) For numbers near 100, find each number's deviation from 100.
Example: 97 Ã 94 - 97 is 3 below 100; 94 is 6 below 100 - Cross-subtract: 97â6 = 91 (or 94â3 = 91, same result) â first two digits - Multiply deviations: 3 Ã 6 = 18 â last two digits - Answer: 9,118
Example: 98 Ã 96 - Deviations: 2 and 4 - Cross: 98â4 = 94 - Multiply: 2Ã4 = 08 - Answer: 9,408
Works for numbers above 100 too (deviations are positive, add instead of subtract).
The Doubling/Halving Method¶
When multiplying two numbers, you can double one and halve the other repeatedly until you reach an easy calculation.
- 32 Ã 15 = 16 Ã 30 = 8 Ã 60 = 4 Ã 120 = 480
- 24 Ã 25 = 12 Ã 50 = 6 Ã 100 = 600
- 18 Ã 35 = 9 Ã 70 = 630
Useful for: Any time one number is near a round number after halving/doubling.
Finger Multiplication for 6â10 (The Ancient Trick)¶
Hold both hands in front of you, fingers spread. Number the fingers from 6 (thumb) to 10 (pinky) on each hand.
To multiply 7 à 8: 1. Touch the "7" finger on one hand to the "8" finger on the other 2. Count the touching fingers plus all fingers below them: that count à 10 = tens digit 3. Multiply the remaining (raised) fingers on each hand together = units digit
Example: 7 Ã 8 - Touching fingers: 7+8 = 3 touching pairs (the two touching fingers + those below) = 5 total down fingers â 5 Ã 10 = 50 - Raised fingers: 3 on the 7-hand, 2 on the 8-hand â 3 Ã 2 = 6 - Answer: 50 + 6 = 56
This works for all combinations from 6Ã6 to 10Ã10.
Part 2: Percentage Calculations¶
The 10% Foundation¶
Everything in percentage math starts with 10%.
To find 10%: Move the decimal one place left. - 10% of 340 = 34 - 10% of 78 = 7.80 - 10% of 2,500 = 250
Building Other Percentages¶
- 5% = Half of 10%
- 15% = 10% + 5%
- 20% = 10% Ã 2
- 25% = Divide by 4
- 30% = 10% Ã 3
- 1% = Move decimal two places left
Tip Math¶
Standard tips: 15%, 18%, 20%
For a $47 bill: - 10% = $4.70 - 15% = $4.70 + $2.35 = $7.05 - 20% = $4.70 Ã 2 = $9.40 - 18% = 20% â 2% = $9.40 â $0.94 = $8.46
Quick 20% tip: Just double the 10% figure.
Even quicker: Round up your bill to a round number first. $47 â $50. 20% of $50 = $10. Close enough.
Discount Math¶
"30% off $80" â what do you pay?
Method 1: Find 30%, subtract. - 10% of $80 = $8 â 30% = $24 â $80 â $24 = $56
Method 2: Find what percentage you're paying (70%), apply directly. - 70% of $80 = 7 Ã $8 = $56
Method 2 is faster when the math is clean.
Sales Tax Estimate¶
If tax is 8%: - 10% of purchase â 2% = approximately 8% - For $60: 10% = $6 â 2% = $1.20 â tax â $4.80 â total â $64.80
The X% of Y = Y% of X Trick¶
This is surprisingly useful. 8% of 25 is the same as 25% of 8. - 25% of 8 = 2 (easy!) - So 8% of 25 = 2
Use it when the number you want a percentage of is easier to work with as the percentage. - 7% of 50 = 50% of 7 = 3.5 - 4% of 75 = 75% of 4 = 3
Part 3: Divisibility Rules¶
Check these instantly without dividing:
| Divisible by | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | Last digit is even | 348 â (ends in 8) |
| 3 | Sum of digits divisible by 3 | 612: 6+1+2=9 â |
| 4 | Last two digits divisible by 4 | 316: 16÷4=4 â |
| 5 | Ends in 0 or 5 | 85 â |
| 6 | Divisible by both 2 and 3 | 312: even, 3+1+2=6 â |
| 7 | Double last digit, subtract from rest; repeat until obvious | 203: 20â(3Ã2)=14 â |
| 8 | Last three digits divisible by 8 | 1,312: 312÷8=39 â |
| 9 | Sum of digits divisible by 9 | 729: 7+2+9=18 â |
| 10 | Ends in 0 | 340 â |
| 11 | Alternating sum of digits = 0 or multiple of 11 | 2,915: 2â9+1â5=â11 â |
| 12 | Divisible by both 3 and 4 |
The most useful daily: 2, 3, 5, 9. If you split a bill or a group and want a clean split, check divisibility first.
Part 4: Cross-Multiplication (Comparing Fractions)¶
To compare 3/7 vs. 4/9 without converting to decimals:
Cross-multiply: 3Ã9 = 27 vs. 4Ã7 = 28 Since 28 > 27, 4/9 > 3/7.
Real-world use: "Is 3 for $7 or 4 for $9 a better deal?" Same calculation: 3Ã9=27, 4Ã7=28. 4/9 is (slightly) more expensive per unit.
Part 5: Estimation Techniques¶
Order of Magnitude Thinking¶
Before calculating, ask: "What power of 10 is this answer near?" This catches massive errors.
- 47 Ã 62 â 50 Ã 60 = 3,000 (actual: 2,914 â you knew it was ~3,000)
- 0.87 Ã 234 â 1 Ã 200 = 200 (actual: 203.58)
The Sandwich Method¶
Bound the answer above and below: - 3.7 Ã 8.2: must be between 3Ã8=24 and 4Ã9=36. Actual: 30.34.
Round to Convenient Numbers¶
- $34.87 + $19.13 â $35 + $19 = $54
- When accuracy matters: $35+$19=$54, then adjust: â$0.13+$0.13 = exactly $54.00
Part 6: Squaring Numbers Near 50¶
For any number near 50, use: (50+n)² = 2500 + 100n + n²
- 53² = 2500 + 300 + 9 = 2,809
- 47² = 2500 â 300 + 9 = 2,209 (note: (50â3)² = 2500 â 100Ã3 + 9)
- 51² = 2500 + 100 + 1 = 2,601
Part 7: The Vedic Math "Vertically and Crosswise" Method¶
For multiplying two 2-digit numbers:
Example: 32 Ã 41
- Multiply units digits: 2 Ã 1 = 2 (rightmost digit)
- Cross-multiply and add: (3Ã1) + (2Ã4) = 3+8 = 11 â write 1, carry 1 (middle digit)
- Multiply tens digits: 3Ã4 = 12, plus carry 1 = 13 (leftmost digits)
- Answer: 1,312
Another: 23 Ã 14 1. 3Ã4 = 12 â write 2, carry 1 2. (2Ã4)+(3Ã1) = 8+3 = 11, +1 carry = 12 â write 2, carry 1 3. 2Ã1 = 2, +1 = 3 4. Answer: 322 â
Part 8: Percentage Reverse Calculation¶
"$34 is 85% of what original price?" (The "original before discount" problem)
Divide the part by the percentage (as a decimal): 34 ÷ 0.85 = ?
Trick: 34/0.85 = 3400/85 â 40. (Actual: exactly 40)
Or use estimation: if $34 is 85%, then 1% â $0.40, so 100% â $40.
Quick Reference Card¶
Most Used Tricks: - Multiply by 11: A, A+B, B (with carry if needed) - Square ending in 5: nÃ(n+1) then "25" - 10% trick: move decimal left one - 20% tip: double the 10% - Divisible by 9: digit sum divisible by 9 - Multiply by 9: Ã10 then subtract - Multiply by 5: ÷2 then Ã10 - Cross-multiply to compare fractions
Daily uses of mental math: - Tipping at restaurants (20% rule) - Checking if a discount is accurate - Splitting bills evenly - Comparing unit prices - Estimating travel time and cost - Checking change received
The goal is intuition, not perfection. A quick estimate that's within 10% is almost always good enough for real-world decisions.