Expanded Form And Standard Form
Place Value of Large Numbers: Expanded Form And Standard Form
Expanded Form And Standard Form
Expanded Form And Standard Form
What you'll learn
- To write a number in expanded form as a sum of the place values of its digits.
- To convert an expanded form back into standard (numeral) form.
- To use expanded form to understand why the digits of a number add up the way they do.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Standard form to expanded form
Verbal: Break the number into what each digit is really worth, then add a "+" between the parts.
Symbolic: 52,634 = 50,000 + 2,000 + 600 + 30 + 4
Level 2 — Expanded form to standard form
Verbal: Add all the parts together; the result is the standard number.
Symbolic: 40,000 + 3,000 + 500 + 20 + 1 = 43,521
Level 3 — Zero digits in expanded form
Rule: If a digit is 0, it contributes 0 and is usually skipped when writing the expanded form (but its place is still "held" in the standard number).
Example: 30,506 = 30,000 + 500 + 6 (tens and thousands... note the ten-thousands and hundreds carry the non-zero parts; the 0s are simply not written as separate terms).
Worked example
Write 78,205 in expanded form
7 → ten-thousands → 70,000
8 → thousands → 8,000
2 → hundreds → 200
0 → tens → 0 (skip)
5 → ones → 5
Answer: 70,000 + 8,000 + 200 + 5
What number is 60,000 + 4,000 + 300 + 20 + 9?
60,000 + 4,000 = 64,000
64,000 + 300 = 64,300
64,300 + 20 = 64,320
64,320 + 9 = 64,329
Answer: 64,329
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Writing the digit instead of its place value (e.g. "7" instead of "70,000") | Forgetting to multiply by the place | Always attach the correct number of zeros for that place |
| Adding an extra term for a zero digit | Trying to include every digit | Zero-valued places contribute nothing — skip them |
| Adding the expanded parts in the wrong order | Careless addition | Add largest to smallest, checking the running total |
Quick check
- Write 93,048 in expanded form.
- What number is 20,000 + 5,000 + 400 + 7?
- Write 6,00,010 in expanded form.
- Stretch: Two numbers have the same expanded-form parts but written in a different order — are they the same number? Why or why not?
Revision tip: Cover the standard number and rebuild it purely from its expanded form to test yourself.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Expanded Form And Standard Form.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
Master this topic with Drishti OS
Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.
Start Free Practice