How to Multiply Radical Expressions? (+FREE Worksheet!)

How to Multiply Radical Expressions? (+FREE Worksheet!)

Multiplying radical expressions uses the same product property that makes simplifying radicals possible: √a × √b = √(ab). Once you know this rule, you can multiply single radical terms, multiply a radical by a binomial, and even multiply two binomials containing radicals using FOIL. This guide covers every case with four worked examples and two video lessons.

Tutor-style math help

Multiply Radical Expressions: what to notice and how to work it

Radicals skill
Radicals are roots. Simplifying or solving with radicals is mostly about perfect powers, domain restrictions, and checking for extraneous answers.

What to notice first

Look for perfect-square, perfect-cube, or matching index factors before reaching for a calculator.

Common student mistake

Do not split a radical across addition. \(\sqrt{a+b}\) is not usually \(\sqrt a+\sqrt b\).

Key formulas and cues

\(\sqrt{ab}=\sqrt a\sqrt b\)
\(x^{m/n}=\sqrt[n]{x^m}\)
\(\sqrt{x}\text{ requires }x\ge0\)
\(\text{squaring can create extraneous answers}\)
domain starts

A reliable path

  1. Find perfect powersBreak the radicand into a perfect power times a leftover factor.
  2. Watch the domainEven roots need nonnegative radicands in real-number problems.
  3. Check solutionsIf you squared both sides, test answers in the original equation.

Worked examples

Simplify a radical

Example: \(\sqrt{72}\)
  1. 72 = 36 times 2.
  2. The square root of 36 is 6.
  3. Leave the leftover 2 inside.
Answer: \(6\sqrt2\)

Find a radical domain

Example: \(y=\sqrt{x-4}\)
  1. The radicand is x – 4.
  2. Require x – 4 >= 0.
  3. Solve the inequality.
Answer: \(x\ge4\)
Try one before moving on
Try: Simplify \(\sqrt{98}\).
Answer: \(7\sqrt2\).
Next step: do the matching worksheet or quiz while the method is still fresh, then come back and explain the first step in your own words.

What Is the Product Property of Radicals?

For any non-negative values a and b:

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√a × √b = √(\(\color{blue}{a \times b}\))

Multiply what is under the radical signs together, then simplify the result if possible. Coefficients outside the radical are multiplied separately, just like ordinary numbers.

Rules for Multiplying Radical Expressions

1. Multiply Coefficients Together

Treat the whole-number parts in front of the radicals as ordinary factors: \(\color{blue}{3\sqrt{5} \times 2\sqrt{5} = (3 \times 2)\sqrt{(5 \times 5)} = 6 \times 5 = 30}\).

2. Multiply the Radicands Together

\(\color{blue}{\sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{12} = \sqrt{36} = 6}\)

3. Simplify the Result

After multiplying radicands, simplify the resulting radical if possible. \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{(6 \times 10)} = \sqrt{60} = \sqrt{(4 \times 15)} = 2\sqrt{15}}\).

4. Multiplying Binomials with Radicals

Use the FOIL method or distributive property: \(\color{blue}{(2 + \sqrt{3})(1 – \sqrt{3}) = 2 – 2\sqrt{3} + \sqrt{3} – 3 = -1 – \sqrt{3}}\).

Step-by-Step Summary

  1. Multiply the coefficients (the numbers outside the radicals).
  2. Multiply the radicands (the numbers or expressions inside the radicals).
  3. Simplify the resulting radical by finding perfect square factors.
  4. Combine any like radical terms if the expression has been expanded.

Watch: Multiplying Radical Expressions (Video Lesson)

Khan Academy walks through multiplying and then simplifying the resulting radical expression:


Multiplying Radical Expressions — Worked Examples

Example 1: Multiply \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{12}}\).

Multiply radicands: \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{(3 \times 12)} = \sqrt{36} = 6}\).
Answer: \(\color{blue}{6}\)

Example 2: Multiply \(\color{blue}{3\sqrt{5} \times 2\sqrt{5}}\).

Coefficients: \(\color{blue}{3 \times 2 = 6}\). Radicands: \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{(5 \times 5)} = \sqrt{25} = 5}\).
Answer: \(\color{blue}{6 \times 5 = 30}\)

Example 3: Multiply \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{6} \times \sqrt{10}}\).

Radicands: \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{(6 \times 10)} = \sqrt{60} = \sqrt{(4 \times 15)} = 2\sqrt{15}}\).
Answer: \(\color{blue}{2\sqrt{15}}\)

Example 4: Multiply \(\color{blue}{(2 + \sqrt{3})(1 – \sqrt{3})}\).

Use FOIL:
F: \(\color{blue}{2 \times 1 = 2}\)
O: \(\color{blue}{2 \times (-\sqrt{3}) = -2\sqrt{3}}\)
I: \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{3} \times 1 = \sqrt{3}}\)
L: \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{3} \times (-\sqrt{3}) = -3}\)
Combine: \(\color{blue}{2 – 2\sqrt{3} + \sqrt{3} – 3 = -1 – \sqrt{3}}\)

More Practice: Step-by-Step Video

This video covers multiplying radical expressions with additional examples including binomials:


Exercises for Multiplying Radical Expressions

Find each product in simplest form.

  1. \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{2} \times \sqrt{18}}\)
  2. \(\color{blue}{2\sqrt{3} \times 5\sqrt{3}}\)
  3. \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{5} \times \sqrt{20}}\)
  4. \(\color{blue}{(\sqrt{2} + 1)(\sqrt{2} – 1)}\)
  5. \(\color{blue}{3\sqrt{2} \times 4\sqrt{6}}\)

Answers

  1. \(\color{blue}{6}\)  (\(\color{blue}{\sqrt{36} = 6}\))
  2. \(\color{blue}{30}\)  (coefficients \(\color{blue}{2 \times 5 = 10}\); \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{9} = 3}\); \(\color{blue}{10 \times 3 = 30}\))
  3. \(\color{blue}{10}\)  (\(\color{blue}{\sqrt{100} = 10}\))
  4. \(\color{blue}{1}\)  (difference of squares: \(\color{blue}{(\sqrt{2})^{2} – 1^{2} = 2 – 1 = 1}\))
  5. \(\color{blue}{24\sqrt{3}}\)  (coefficients: \(\color{blue}{3 \times 4 = 12}\); radicand: \(\color{blue}{\sqrt{12} = 2\sqrt{3}}\); \(\color{blue}{12 \times 2\sqrt{3} = 24\sqrt{3}}\))
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Want More Practice?

We haven’t published a worksheet built specifically for Multiplying Radical Expressions just yet. In the meantime, the free worksheets below cover closely related skills and concepts. If you’d like extra practice, download any that look helpful, complete the problems, and check your work — they’re a great way to reinforce what you learned on this page and strengthen the foundations this topic builds on:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you multiply radicals with different radicands?

Yes. Use the product property: √a × √b = √(ab). Multiply the radicands together and then simplify. The result may or may not be a whole number.

What is the conjugate and why is it useful?

The conjugate of \(\color{blue}{(a + \sqrt{b})}\) is \(\color{blue}{(a – \sqrt{b})}\). Multiplying conjugates eliminates the radical using the difference of squares pattern: \(\color{blue}{(a + \sqrt{b})(a – \sqrt{b}) = a^{2} – b}\). This technique is also used when rationalizing denominators.

Must you always simplify after multiplying?

Yes — always check whether the product under the radical can be simplified. A perfect square factor under the radical means the expression is not yet in simplest form.

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