GCSE Maths linear equations worksheet with answers

A GCSE Maths linear equations worksheet with answers for one-step, two-step, brackets, fractions and unknowns on both sides.

This GCSE Maths linear equations worksheet with answers is designed for focused GCSE revision. Linear equations are about balance. Each step should keep both sides equal while moving towards the unknown on its own.

Use it as a short practice task before moving into mixed exam questions. If you need more structured help, I also offer GCSE Maths tutoring and parent-friendly GCSE revision support.

Need Maths support?

Take a free test paper to see which topics need work, or book private tutoring with me for more focused one-to-one support.

Before you start

The level for this worksheet is Foundation to Higher. Work through the questions without checking the answers first. The point is not only to get the final answer, but to practise the method clearly enough that you could repeat it in a test.

Keep your working visible. GCSE Maths mark schemes often reward method, so a clear first line can still matter even if the arithmetic goes wrong later.

Skills this worksheet checks

This worksheet checks whether you can recognise common linear equations question types, choose a sensible first step, and keep your working organised. Those three habits matter more than racing through the list.

For each question, write one line that explains the method before you calculate. That might be a formula, a common denominator, an equation, a route through a diagram, or the probability operation you are using. This makes the practice closer to the way marks are awarded in GCSE exams.

Worksheet questions

  1. Solve x + 7 = 19.
  2. Solve 3x = 27.
  3. Solve 2x - 5 = 17.
  4. Solve 4(x + 3) = 28.
  5. Solve 5x + 2 = 3x + 14.
  6. Solve (x/3) + 4 = 10.
  7. Solve 7 - 2x = 15.
  8. Solve 3(2x - 1) = 21.
  9. Solve 4x/5 = 12.
  10. A number doubled and increased by 9 is 31. Find the number.

Answers and method checks

#QuestionMethodAnswer
1Solve x + 7 = 19.Subtract 7 from both sides.x = 12
2Solve 3x = 27.Divide both sides by 3.x = 9
3Solve 2x - 5 = 17.Add 5, then divide by 2.x = 11
4Solve 4(x + 3) = 28.Divide by 4 first, or expand, then solve.x = 4
5Solve 5x + 2 = 3x + 14.Subtract 3x and subtract 2.x = 6
6Solve (x/3) + 4 = 10.Subtract 4, then multiply by 3.x = 18
7Solve 7 - 2x = 15.Subtract 7 to get -2x = 8, then divide by -2.x = -4
8Solve 3(2x - 1) = 21.Expand to 6x - 3 = 21, then solve.x = 4
9Solve 4x/5 = 12.Multiply by 5, then divide by 4.x = 15
10A number doubled and increased by 9 is 31. Find the number.Set up 2x + 9 = 31.11

How to mark this worksheet

Mark each question with more detail than a tick or cross. If the answer is wrong, label the error: method choice, arithmetic, notation, units, signs, calculator input, or not reading the question carefully.

For linear equations, it is especially useful to redo the questions you missed after a short break. A topic can feel familiar immediately after reading the answer, but the real test is whether you can start the method independently later.

A good correction is specific. Instead of writing 'revise this', write the exact fix: choose a common denominator, show the multiplier, update the probability after the first choice, label the radius, or subtract the smaller coordinate from the larger one. Specific corrections make the next practice session much easier to plan.

Common mistakes

  • Changing only one side of the equation.
  • Dropping negative signs when the x term is negative.
  • Expanding brackets incorrectly.
  • Trying to do too many steps in one line.

Extension practice

After marking the worksheet, choose three questions and change one number in each. Keep the structure the same, then solve your new versions. This is a quick way to check whether you understand the method rather than remembering the original answer.

If the changed question becomes much harder, that is useful information. It usually means the method is not fully secure yet, or that a small change has introduced a new skill such as negative numbers, fractions, unit conversion, exact form, or a second step.

Students aiming for higher grades should also write one short explanation question. For example: explain why this vector is parallel, explain why these two routes must be added, explain why this theorem applies, or explain why the original amount is not the same as the sale amount. These explanations build the reasoning marks that many students miss.

What to practise next

Once you can complete this worksheet accurately, move to mixed questions where the topic is not written in the title. That is closer to the exam, because you have to recognise the method as well as carry it out.

You can also use the Maths practice papers hub to connect topic practice with broader exam-style work. If the same mistake keeps appearing, bring that exact question to a lesson or send it to me so we can work out what is blocking the method.

Need Maths support?

Take a free test paper to see which topics need work, or book private tutoring with me for more focused one-to-one support.

FAQs

How should I use a GCSE Maths worksheet?

Try the questions first without looking at the answers. Then mark carefully, write down the exact mistake, and redo one similar question a few days later.

Are these questions enough for exam revision?

They are a focused starting point. For exam preparation, follow them with mixed exam-style questions and past-paper practice so the topic is not always named for you.

Should I time myself?

Use untimed practice while learning the method. Add timing later, once the topic feels accurate enough for exam-style practice.

What should I do if I get most questions wrong?

Go back to one or two worked examples, practise the first step slowly, and avoid rushing into a full worksheet before the method is secure.

Free maths test papers

Turn weak topics into easy marks

Start with a free exam-style paper, get a predicted grade and see the topics that need more work. Then revise with a clearer plan, or get in touch if you want one-to-one support from me.

Sophie thinking through a Maths question