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Estimating Differences

Subtraction of Large Numbers: Estimating Differences

Estimating Differences

Estimating Differences

What you'll learn

  • Round numbers to the nearest ten, hundred or thousand before subtracting.
  • Use estimation to quickly check if an exact answer is reasonable.
  • Understand when an estimate is "good enough" versus when an exact answer is needed.

Key concepts

Level 1 — Why estimate?

Verbal: Estimating gives a quick, approximate answer using rounded numbers — useful for checking if an exact calculation makes sense.

Level 2 — Rounding rules recap

Round to nearestLook at digitRule
Tenones digit0–4 → round down, 5–9 → round up
Hundredtens digit0–4 → round down, 5–9 → round up
Thousandhundreds digit0–4 → round down, 5–9 → round up

Level 3 — Estimating a subtraction

Symbolic: Estimate 6,215 − 2,860 to the nearest hundred. 6,215 → 6,200; 2,860 → 2,900. Estimate = 6,200 − 2,900 = 3,300. (Exact answer is 3,355 — the estimate is close.)

Level 4 — Using estimation to check exact answers

If your exact subtraction gives an answer very different from your estimate, recheck your work — you likely made a borrowing mistake.

Worked example

Estimate 8,432 − 3,675 by rounding to the nearest hundred.

Step 1 — Round 8,432: tens digit is 3 (below 5) → rounds down to 8,400.
Step 2 — Round 3,675: tens digit is 7 (5 or above) → rounds up to 3,700.
Step 3 — Subtract rounded numbers: 8,400 − 3,700 = 4,700.
Answer: Estimated difference ≈ 4,700 (exact answer is 4,757).

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Rounding after subtracting instead of beforeConfusing the order of stepsRound each number first, then subtract the rounded values
Looking at the wrong digit while roundingMixing up tens/hundreds/thousands placeAlways check the digit one place to the right of the rounding place
Treating the estimate as the exact answerForgetting estimation is approximateUse the word "about" or "≈" with estimates
Rounding down a 5Misremembering the ruleA tens/ones digit of exactly 5 always rounds UP

Quick check

  • Estimate 4,278 − 1,635 to the nearest hundred. (≈2,700; 4,300−1,600)
  • Estimate 762 − 348 to the nearest ten. (≈420; 760−340)
  • Estimate 9,500 − 4,850 to the nearest thousand. (≈5,000; 10,000−5,000)
  • Round 3,150 to the nearest hundred. (3,200)
  • Stretch: Estimate 6,040 − 2,981 to the nearest hundred and compare with the exact answer 3,059. (Estimate ≈ 6,000 − 3,000 = 3,000, close to 3,059)

Revision tip: Before solving any big subtraction, do a 5-second mental estimate first — it catches most silly mistakes.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Estimating Differences.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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