Adding and Subtracting Integers
Master the rules for integer addition and subtraction. Same signs add, different signs subtract.
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Before you read on — quickly: What is 5 + (−3)? What about (−4) + (−2)? Try to picture each on a number line.
Adding integers means combining movements on the number line. Positive = move right. Negative = move left. Subtracting is the opposite of adding — or equivalently, "adding the opposite."
Think of addition as jumping on the number line. 5 + (−3) means start at 5, jump 3 units left (because of the minus), landing on 2. (−4) + (−2) means start at −4, jump 2 more left, landing on −6. Same signs = add the magnitudes. Different signs = subtract the magnitudes.
Know
- The sign rules for adding integers
- That subtracting = adding the opposite
- Key phrases: "add", "subtract", "sum", "difference"
Understand
- Why adding a negative is the same as subtracting
- Why subtracting a negative makes the answer larger
- How the number line models addition and subtraction
Can Do
- Add any two integers using the number line or sign rules
- Subtract integers by "adding the opposite"
- Solve combined addition and subtraction problems
Wrong: "−5 − 3 = −2" (subtracted the wrong way). You're subtracting 3 from −5, which makes it more negative.
Right: −5 − 3 = −5 + (−3) = −8. Subtracting 3 = adding −3. Both negative = add magnitudes, keep the negative sign.
Wrong: "7 − (−2) = 5" (subtracted instead of added). Subtracting a negative is adding!
Right: 7 − (−2) = 7 + 2 = 9. Two minuses make a plus. The answer gets larger, not smaller.
There are two cases for adding integers: same signs and different signs. The sign rule tells you which operation to use on the magnitudes.
Same signs: add the magnitudes, keep the sign. (−4) + (−3) = −7. 5 + 3 = 8. Different signs: subtract the smaller magnitude from the larger, keep the sign of the larger. 5 + (−3) = 2 (positive wins). (−5) + 3 = −2 (negative wins).
What to write in your book
- Same signs → add the magnitudes, keep the sign.
- Different signs → subtract the magnitudes, keep the sign of the larger.
- Example: $(-6) + (-2) = -8$, but $6 + (-2) = 4$.
Every subtraction can be rewritten as adding the opposite. This is the key trick: $a - b = a + (-b)$. Once rewritten, use the addition sign rules.
$a - b = a + (-b)$. Subtracting a positive = adding a negative (answer gets smaller). $a - (-b) = a + b$. Subtracting a negative = adding a positive (answer gets bigger!). Two minuses always make a plus.
What to write in your book
- Every subtraction can be rewritten as adding the opposite: $a - b = a + (-b)$.
- Two minuses next to each other always make a plus.
- Once rewritten, use the addition sign rules from Card 5.
When you have multiple operations, work left to right, rewriting each subtraction as you go. Brackets first (if any), then left to right.
For −8 + 12 − (−5) − 7: Step 1: Rewrite subtractions. −8 + 12 + 5 − 7. Step 2: Work left to right. (−8 + 12) = 4. (4 + 5) = 9. (9 − 7) = 2. Answer: 2.
Watch Me Solve It · 3 examples
- 1Identify the operationBoth numbers are negative (same sign)Same sign = add the magnitudes, keep the negative sign.
- 2Add the magnitudes7 + 4 = 11
- 3Apply the signBoth negative, so answer is negative: −11On the number line: start at −7, jump 4 left, land on −11.
- 1Rewrite the subtraction5 − (−3) = 5 + (+3)Subtracting a negative = adding the opposite. Two minuses make a plus.
- 2Add5 + 3 = 8
- 3Verify on number lineStart at 5, jump 3 right (because −(−3) = +3), land on 8.The answer is larger than 5 because we subtracted a negative!
- 1Rewrite all subtractions−8 + 12 − (−5) − 7 = −8 + 12 + 5 + (−7)−(−5) = +5. −7 = +(−7).
- 2Work left to right−8 + 12 = 4
4 + 5 = 9
9 + (−7) = 2 - 3Alternative: group positives and negativesPositives: 12 + 5 = 17. Negatives: −8 + (−7) = −15. 17 + (−15) = 2.Both methods give the same answer — use whichever you prefer!
Adding Integers
- Same sign: add magnitudes, keep sign
- Different signs: subtract magnitudes, keep larger sign
- Use number line to verify
Subtracting Integers
- $a - b = a + (-b)$
- Subtracting negative = adding positive
- Two minuses always make a plus
Sign Rules
- (+) + (+) = (+)
- (−) + (−) = (−)
- (+) + (−) = subtract, keep larger
- $a - (-b) = a + b$
Combined Operations
- Rewrite all subtractions first
- Work left to right
- Or group all positives and negatives
How are you completing this lesson?
Brain Trainer · 4 problems
Four drill problems to master integer addition and subtraction. Work each, then reveal the answer.
-
1 −15 + 8
Different signs: subtract 8 from 15 = 7. The larger magnitude is 15 (negative), so keep the minus.−7 -
2 6 − (−9)
Subtracting a negative = adding the opposite. 6 − (−9) = 6 + 9.15 -
3 −4 − 7 + (−3) − (−10)
Rewrite: −4 + (−7) + (−3) + 10 = −14 + 10 = −4.−4 -
4 Temperature is −6°C. It drops 8°C, then rises 5°C. What's the final temperature?
−6 − 8 + 5 = −6 + (−8) + 5 = −14 + 5 = −9.−9°C
Quick Check · 5 questions
Show Your Working · 3 questions
Q6. Evaluate (−5) + 8 + (−12) − (−3). Show all steps.
Q7. Explain why 10 − (−4) gives a larger answer than 10 − 4. Use the number line or the "add the opposite" rule in your explanation.
Q8. Find the value of $a$ if $a + 7 = −2$. Then find $b$ if $−5 − b = 3$. Explain your method for each.
Quick Check
1. B — −9 + 6 = −3 (different signs, subtract, keep larger sign).
2. C — 8 − (−5) = 8 + 5 = 13 (two minuses = plus).
3. A — −10 + (−6) = −16 (same sign, add, keep minus).
4. D — −3 − (−8) + 2 = −3 + 8 + 2 = 7.
5. B — −20 + 15 − 8 = −5 − 8 = −13 metres.
Show Your Working Model Answers
Q6 (3 marks): Rewrite: −5 + 8 + (−12) + 3 [1]. −5 + 8 = 3 [0.5]. 3 + (−12) = −9 [0.5]. −9 + 3 = −6 [1].
Q7 (3 marks): 10 − (−4) = 10 + 4 = 14 [1]. 10 − 4 = 6 [1]. 14 is larger because subtracting a negative means adding, which increases the value [1].
Q8 (3 marks): $a + 7 = −2$, so $a = −2 − 7 = −9$ [1.5]. $−5 − b = 3$, so $−b = 3 + 5 = 8$, thus $b = −8$ [1.5].
The Magic Sum
Using each of the integers −5, −4, −3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 exactly once, fill in the boxes to make the equation true: $\square + \square + \square + \square + \square = 0$. How many different solutions can you find?
Reveal solution
One simple solution: (−5) + (−4) + 0 + 4 + 5 = 0. The key insight: choose pairs of opposites that cancel, plus zero. There are many solutions — try (−3) + (−2) + 0 + 2 + 3 = 0, or (−5) + (−3) + 1 + 2 + 5 = 0. Any combination where the positives and negatives cancel out works.
Adding
Same sign: add, keep sign
Adding
Different: subtract, keep larger
Subtracting
$a - b = a + (-b)$
Key rule
−(−) = + (two minuses)
Number line
Right = +, left = −
Combined
Rewrite, then left to right
Interactive: Integer Number Line Jumper
Set your starting number and jump amount, then watch the jumper land. Green = positive, red = negative.
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