calcuk

Precision Utility

Quadratic Equation
Calculator

Standard Form

ax² + bx + c = 0

Solution

Quadratic Formula

Solve any quadratic equation in seconds. Enter the coefficients a, b and c and the calculator instantly finds both roots, the discriminant, the vertex and the axis of symmetry. Handles real and complex roots.

Equation Coefficients

Your Equation

1x² - 5x + 6 = 0

Solutions

x = 2, x = 3

Root Type

2 Real Roots

Discriminant

1

Vertex X

2.5

Vertex Y

-0.25

Root 1

x = 3

Root 2

x = 2

Discriminant (b²-4ac)

1

Vertex (-b/2a, f(-b/2a))

(2.5, -0.25)

How the quadratic calculator works

Enter the three coefficients of your quadratic equation: a (the x² coefficient), b (the x coefficient) and c (the constant term). The equation must be in the standard form ax² + bx + c = 0.

The calculator applies the quadratic formula x = (-b ± sqrt(b² - 4ac)) / 2a to find both solutions instantly. It first computes the discriminant (b² - 4ac) to determine whether the roots are real or complex.

You will also see the vertex of the parabola, calculated as (-b/2a, f(-b/2a)). The vertex is the maximum or minimum point of the curve y = ax² + bx + c. If a is positive the parabola opens upward and the vertex is a minimum; if a is negative it opens downward and the vertex is a maximum.

Results update automatically as you type — no need to press a button.

What you need to know about quadratic equations

A quadratic equation is any equation that can be written in the form ax² + bx + c = 0, where a, b and c are real numbers and a is not zero. The solutions (also called roots or zeros) are the x-values where the parabola crosses the x-axis.

Key concepts:

  • The quadratic formula — x = (-b ± sqrt(b² - 4ac)) / 2a solves every quadratic equation. It works whether the roots are rational, irrational or complex.
  • The discriminant — the value b² - 4ac determines the nature of the roots. Positive means two distinct real roots, zero means one repeated real root, negative means two complex conjugate roots.
  • Real vs complex roots — real roots are ordinary numbers on the number line. Complex roots involve the imaginary unit i (where i² = -1) and always come in conjugate pairs: a + bi and a - bi.
  • The vertex — the turning point of the parabola is at x = -b/(2a). Substituting back gives the y-coordinate. This is the minimum value when a > 0 or the maximum when a < 0.
  • Axis of symmetry — the vertical line x = -b/(2a) divides the parabola into two equal halves.

Quadratic equations appear throughout maths, physics and engineering — from projectile motion and area problems to optimisation and circuit analysis.

Frequently asked questions

What is the quadratic formula?

The quadratic formula is x = (-b ± sqrt(b² - 4ac)) / 2a. It finds the values of x that satisfy any equation in the form ax² + bx + c = 0, where a is not zero.

What is the discriminant and what does it tell you?

The discriminant is b² - 4ac. If it is positive the equation has two distinct real roots, if it equals zero there is one repeated root, and if it is negative the equation has two complex (imaginary) roots.

Can a quadratic equation have no real solutions?

Yes. When the discriminant (b² - 4ac) is negative, there are no real solutions. Instead the equation has two complex roots expressed in the form a + bi and a - bi, where i is the imaginary unit.

What is the vertex of a parabola?

The vertex is the turning point of the parabola — its highest or lowest point. For y = ax² + bx + c the vertex x-coordinate is -b/(2a) and the y-coordinate is found by substituting that x back into the equation.

What happens when a = 0?

When a = 0 the equation is no longer quadratic — it becomes the linear equation bx + c = 0. The single solution is x = -c/b (assuming b is also not zero).

How do I find the axis of symmetry?

The axis of symmetry of a parabola y = ax² + bx + c is the vertical line x = -b/(2a). It passes through the vertex and divides the parabola into two mirror-image halves.