11+ Area & Perimeter Practice
(GL Assessment)

In the GL Assessment 11+ maths paper, area and perimeter sit within the Shape and Space strand, and a typical 50-question paper contains roughly two to four questions that test them directly. Every question is multiple choice with five options (A to E), and no marks are deducted for a wrong answer, so a sensible guess is always worth making.

These questions ask your child to find the distance around a shape (the perimeter) or the space inside it (the area). Early questions deal with a single rectangle or square. Later ones build up to compound L-shapes, triangles, and "path around a garden" problems that need two or three steps. The paper is broadly arranged in increasing difficulty, so the harder area questions tend to appear deeper in.

If your child mixes up area and perimeter, you are in very good company. It is the single most common confusion in this topic, and it is completely fixable with focused practice. The formulae are short, the methods are repeatable, and confidence comes quickly once the two ideas are clearly separated.

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What the GL 11+ Tests on Area & Perimeter

GL tests a fairly predictable set of sub-skills. In rough order of how often they appear:

  • Perimeter of rectangles and squares, including working out a missing side (~15%).
  • Area of rectangles and squares, direct calculation (~15%).
  • Compound shapes (L, T and H shapes), found either by splitting into rectangles and adding, or by subtracting a cut-out (~30% across perimeter and area combined).
  • Area of triangles using base x height / 2, and parallelograms using base x perpendicular height (~20% combined).
  • Reverse problems (given the area, find a missing length) and real-world contexts such as gardens, fencing, frames and carpet (~15% combined).
  • Same-area / different-perimeter reasoning, a Year 6 curriculum point (~5%).

Difficulty spans the full D1 to D3 range: one-step rectangle sums at the easy end, multi-step compound shapes and path-border problems at the hard end. Format is always five-option multiple choice. Note: the weightings above are drawn from analysis of GL practice papers and tutor resources, so treat them as well-grounded estimates rather than figures GL publishes.

Sample Area & Perimeter Questions

Five questions drawn from PrepStep’s area & perimeter bank, spanning Foundation to Challenging. Tap “Show worked explanation” to see the full method after you’ve had a go. The correct answer is highlighted on each question so you can check immediately.

Question 1 Foundation

Emily's rectangular garden is 8 metres long and 5 metres wide. What is the perimeter of her garden?

8 m5 m
  1. 13 metres
  2. 18 metres
  3. 40 metres
  4. 26 metres
  5. 21 metres
Show worked explanation

To find the perimeter of a rectangle, add all four sides together. The formula is: Perimeter = 2 × (length + width). So: 2 × (8 + 5) = 2 × 13 = 26 metres. ✓

Question 2 Foundation

A rectangular swimming pool is 12 metres long and 6 metres wide. What is its area?

12 m6 m
  1. 18 square metres
  2. 36 square metres
  3. 48 square metres
  4. 24 square metres
  5. 72 square metres
Show worked explanation

To find the area of a rectangle, multiply length by width. Area = length × width = 12 × 6 = 72 square metres. ✓

Question 3 Intermediate

A rectangle has a perimeter of 24 cm. Its length is 8 cm. What is its width?

8 cm?Perimeter = 24 cm
  1. 4 cm
  2. 3 cm
  3. 6 cm
  4. 8 cm
  5. 16 cm
Show worked explanation

Perimeter = 2 × (length + width), so 24 = 2 × (8 + width). Divide both sides by 2: 12 = 8 + width. Therefore width = 12 - 8 = 4 cm. ✓

Question 4 Intermediate

Emma's rectangular garden has an area of 48 square metres and a width of 6 metres. What is the length?

?6 mArea = 48 m²
  1. 6 metres
  2. 12 metres
  3. 8 metres
  4. 42 metres
  5. 54 metres
Show worked explanation

Area = length × width, so 48 = length × 6. To find length, divide: 48 ÷ 6 = 8 metres. ✓

Question 5 Challenging

A square garden has an area of 225 square metres. What is its perimeter?

225 m²? m? m
  1. 15 metres
  2. 30 metres
  3. 60 metres
  4. 45 metres
  5. 75 metres
Show worked explanation

Side × side = 225, so side = 15 m. Perimeter = 4 × 15 = 60 metres. ✓

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Common mistake 1 of 4

Calculating area when the question asks for perimeter (or the reverse).

Tip: Train your child to ask "inside or around?" before they pick up the pencil. GL deliberately offers both answers as options.

Common mistake 2 of 4

Forgetting that a path or border eats into both sides.

Tip: A 2 m path running inside a garden reduces each dimension by 4 m, not 2 m. This is the most common slip on border problems.

Common mistake 3 of 4

Forgetting to halve when finding a triangle's area.

Tip: Base x height gives the surrounding rectangle; the triangle is half of that. The un-halved answer is always sitting there as a tempting wrong option.

Common mistake 4 of 4

Using the slant side instead of the perpendicular height.

Tip: For triangles and parallelograms, the area needs the straight-up height, not the sloping edge. GL labels both to tempt the wrong choice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What area and perimeter topics come up in the GL 11+ maths exam?

GL tests perimeter and area of rectangles, squares, triangles and parallelograms, plus compound L-shapes, reverse problems (find a missing side from the area), and real-world contexts like gardens and fencing. Questions range from single-step calculations to multi-step "path around a shape" problems. All are five-option multiple choice.

How many area and perimeter questions are in the GL 11+ maths paper?

Expect roughly two to four questions in a 50-question paper. Area and perimeter sit inside the wider Shape and Space strand, which makes up around 8 to 12 questions in total. Number topics dominate the paper, so geometry is a smaller but reliable component.

What is the difference between area and perimeter for the 11+?

Perimeter is the total distance around the outside of a shape, measured in linear units like cm or m. Area is the space inside, measured in square units like cm2 or m2. Confusing the two is the most common mistake, so children should decide "inside or around?" before calculating.

Are circle questions (area and circumference) in the GL 11+?

Circles using pi are not part of the Key Stage 2 curriculum and are very unlikely in a standard GL 11+ paper. They are secondary-school content. Children should focus on rectangles, squares, triangles, parallelograms and compound shapes. A rare super-selective paper might include a basic circle question, but it is not expected.

What formulae does my child need to remember for area and perimeter?

Rectangle area is length x width; rectangle perimeter is 2 x (length + width). Square area is side x side. Triangle area is half x base x perpendicular height. Parallelogram area is base x perpendicular height. These are not provided in the exam, so they must be memorised and fluent.

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