Example 1 — Simplify a fraction
Simplify \( \tfrac{18}{24} \). Compute \( g=\gcd(18,24)=6 \). Then \( \tfrac{18}{24}=\tfrac{18/6}{24/6}=\tfrac{3}{4} \).
Enter two fractions and click Calculate to check if they’re equivalent, see the cross-multiplication, and view simplified forms. Try the ready-made examples below.
An Equivalent Fractions Calculator is a math tool that finds, verifies, and simplifies fractions that represent the same value. Two fractions are equivalent when they reduce to the same simplest form or, equivalently, when their cross-products match. This calculator lets you simplify a single fraction, compare two fractions for equivalence, or generate a list of equivalent fractions by multiplying numerator and denominator by a common nonzero factor. It also provides the algebraic steps, so students and educators can see exactly how each result is obtained. All formulas are written in LaTeX and will render responsively when you load MathJax or math.js on your page.
Fractions model parts of a whole and ratios. Many different-looking fractions can describe the same quantity. For example, \( \tfrac{1}{2} = \tfrac{2}{4} = \tfrac{50}{100} \). The calculator uses three core ideas: (1) scaling a fraction by any nonzero factor preserves its value, (2) greatest common divisor (GCD) reduction puts a fraction into lowest terms, and (3) cross-multiplication tests whether two fractions are equal without first simplifying. You can also request a specific denominator or numerator and the tool will compute the necessary scaling factor, if it exists, to reach that target exactly. It handles negative signs (placing them in the numerator by convention) and returns results in canonical form for clarity.
Equivalence by scaling: \[ \frac{a}{b} \sim \frac{ka}{kb} \quad \text{for any } k \in \mathbb{Z}\setminus\{0\},\ b \ne 0. \]
GCD simplification: \[ g=\gcd(|a|,|b|),\quad \frac{a}{b}=\frac{a/g}{\,b/g\,} \text{ in lowest terms}. \]
Equivalence test (cross-multiplication): \[ \frac{a}{b}=\frac{c}{d} \iff ad=bc,\quad b\ne0,\ d\ne0. \]
Scaling to a target denominator \(\hat b\): \[ k=\frac{\hat b}{b}\ \text{(integer required)},\quad \frac{a}{b}=\frac{k a}{\hat b}. \]
Scaling to a target numerator \(\hat a\): \[ k=\frac{\hat a}{a}\ \text{(integer required)},\quad \frac{a}{b}=\frac{\hat a}{k b}. \]
Simplify \( \tfrac{18}{24} \). Compute \( g=\gcd(18,24)=6 \). Then \( \tfrac{18}{24}=\tfrac{18/6}{24/6}=\tfrac{3}{4} \).
Are \( \tfrac{9}{12} \) and \( \tfrac{3}{4} \) equivalent? Test \(9\cdot4=36\) and \(12\cdot3=36\). Since \(ad=bc\), the fractions are equivalent.
Scale \( \tfrac{2}{5} \) to denominator \(40\). \(k=\tfrac{40}{5}=8\). New numerator \(=2\cdot8=16\). Result \( \tfrac{16}{40} \sim \tfrac{2}{5} \).
\( \tfrac{0}{7} \sim \tfrac{0}{100} \) because both equal \(0\). Denominator must never be zero.
Fractions that represent the same number, obtainable by multiplying or dividing numerator and denominator by the same nonzero integer.
Multiply numerator and denominator by any nonzero integer \(k\): \(\tfrac{a}{b} \to \tfrac{ka}{kb}\).
Use cross-multiplication: \(\tfrac{a}{b}=\tfrac{c}{d}\) iff \(ad=bc\) (with \(b,d\ne0\)).
When numerator and denominator share no common factor except 1; compute \(g=\gcd(|a|,|b|)\) and divide both by \(g\).
Yes. It solves for an integer scaling factor \(k\) to reach your requested numerator or denominator exactly.
No. \(-\tfrac{a}{b}=\tfrac{-a}{b}=\tfrac{a}{-b}\). The tool returns a canonical sign placement.
Yes—choose \(k=2,3,\dots\) to produce \( \tfrac{2a}{2b}, \tfrac{3a}{3b}, \dots \) infinitely many equivalents.
Convert mixed numbers to improper fractions and decimals to rational form (if exact) before applying the same rules.
No. Denominators must be nonzero. A zero numerator is allowed and represents the value \(0\).