$x$-Intercepts and $y$-Intercept of Parabolas
Sub $x = 0$ for the $y$-intercept. Sub $y = 0$ for the $x$-intercepts. A parabola can have 0, 1, or 2 $x$-intercepts — learn how to predict which.
Printable Worksheets
Print or save as PDF — or build a custom worksheet from any module's questions.
Three different parabolas: $y = x^2 - 4$, $y = x^2$, and $y = x^2 + 4$. The first has its vertex BELOW the $x$-axis. The second sits ON the $x$-axis. The third sits ABOVE the $x$-axis. All open upward. How many times does each one cross the $x$-axis? Why are the answers different?
Intercepts are where a curve crosses the axes. The rules are the same as for straight lines:
The red curve $y = x^2 - 4$ has TWO $x$-intercepts at $(\pm 2, 0)$ and a $y$-intercept at $(0, -4)$. The gold curve $y = x^2$ has ONE $x$-intercept — right at the vertex $(0, 0)$. The purple curve $y = x^2 + 4$ never crosses the $x$-axis: NO real $x$-intercepts. All three have $y$-intercepts (you can always sub $x = 0$).
Know
- $y$-intercept of $y = f(x)$: substitute $x = 0$
- $x$-intercepts of $y = f(x)$: substitute $y = 0$ and solve
- A parabola can have 0, 1, or 2 $x$-intercepts
Understand
- Why $x$-intercepts of $y = (x - h)^2 + k$ require $-k/a \ge 0$ (or, when $a = 1$, $-k \ge 0$)
- Why $x$-intercepts are symmetric about the axis of symmetry
- Why the vertex being on the $x$-axis means exactly ONE $x$-intercept
Can Do
- Find the $y$-intercept by substitution
- Solve $y = 0$ for parabolas in $y = ax^2 + c$ and $y = a(x - h)^2 + k$ form
- Predict number of $x$-intercepts before solving
Wrong: $y = x^2 + 4$ crosses the $x$-axis at $(2, 0)$ and $(-2, 0)$.
Right: Setting $y = 0$ gives $x^2 = -4$, which has NO real solutions. Vertex $(0, 4)$ is above the $x$-axis and the curve opens up — it never touches.
Wrong: Forgetting the $\pm$. $x^2 = 9 \Rightarrow x = 3$ only.
Right: $x^2 = 9 \Rightarrow x = \pm 3$. Parabolas have symmetric $x$-intercepts.
How you solve depends on the form of the equation:
Form 1: $y = ax^2 + c$. Set $y = 0$: $ax^2 + c = 0 \Rightarrow x^2 = -\dfrac{c}{a} \Rightarrow x = \pm\sqrt{-c/a}$ (real iff $-c/a \ge 0$).
Form 2 (vertex form): $y = a(x - h)^2 + k$. Set $y = 0$: $a(x - h)^2 = -k \Rightarrow (x - h)^2 = -\dfrac{k}{a} \Rightarrow x = h \pm \sqrt{-k/a}$ (real iff $-k/a \ge 0$).
The $\pm$ gives you the symmetric pair, automatically equidistant from the axis $x = h$.
You can predict the number of $x$-intercepts from the vertex and opening direction — no algebra required.
- Vertex on the $x$-axis ($k = 0$): ONE $x$-intercept (a "touch").
- Vertex BELOW the axis, opens UP (or vertex ABOVE, opens DOWN): TWO $x$-intercepts.
- Vertex ABOVE the axis, opens UP (or vertex BELOW, opens DOWN): NO $x$-intercepts.
Visualise: if the vertex is on the "wrong" side of the $x$-axis for the curve's direction, the curve never reaches the axis.
Watch Me Solve It · 3 examples
- 1$y$-interceptSub $x = 0$: $y = 0 - 4 = -4$. Point $(0, -4)$.
- 2$x$-intercepts: set $y = 0$$0 = x^2 - 4 \Rightarrow x^2 = 4 \Rightarrow x = \pm 2$.
- 3Write the points$x$-intercepts $(2, 0)$ and $(-2, 0)$.Vertex $(0, -4)$ is below the $x$-axis and curve opens up $\Rightarrow$ two crossings, as predicted.
- 1$y$-interceptSub $x = 0$: $y = (0 - 1)^2 - 9 = 1 - 9 = -8$. Point $(0, -8)$.
- 2$x$-intercepts: isolate the square$0 = (x - 1)^2 - 9 \Rightarrow (x - 1)^2 = 9 \Rightarrow x - 1 = \pm 3$.
- 3Solve for $x$$x = 1 + 3 = 4$ or $x = 1 - 3 = -2$. Points $(4, 0)$ and $(-2, 0)$.Symmetric about axis $x = 1$: both points are 3 units from the axis.
- 1Predict from vertexVertex $(3, 5)$ is ABOVE the $x$-axis. Opens UP ($a = 2 > 0$). Same sign $\Rightarrow$ no crossings.
- 2Confirm algebraically$0 = 2(x - 3)^2 + 5 \Rightarrow (x - 3)^2 = -\tfrac{5}{2}$, but a square can't be negative. No real solutions.
- 3$y$-interceptSub $x = 0$: $y = 2(0 - 3)^2 + 5 = 18 + 5 = 23$. Point $(0, 23)$.$y$-intercept always exists; $x$-intercepts may not.
Common Pitfalls
$y$-intercept
- Sub $x = 0$
- Always one point
- Read it off after evaluating
$x$-intercepts
- Sub $y = 0$
- Isolate the square
- Take $\pm$ square root
Vertex form
- $0 = a(x - h)^2 + k$
- $(x - h)^2 = -k/a$
- $x = h \pm \sqrt{-k/a}$
How many?
- $k = 0$: one (touch)
- $a, k$ opposite signs: two
- $a, k$ same signs: none
How are you completing this lesson?
Brain Trainer · 4 problems
Four quick problems on intercepts of parabolas.
1 Find the $y$-intercept of $y = (x - 2)^2 + 5$.
Sub $x = 0$: $y = 4 + 5 = 9$.$(0, 9)$2 Find the $x$-intercepts of $y = x^2 - 16$.
$x^2 = 16 \Rightarrow x = \pm 4$.$(4, 0)$ and $(-4, 0)$3 How many $x$-intercepts does $y = 3x^2 + 1$ have?
$a = 3 > 0$, $c = 1 > 0$: same sign, no crossings.0 (none)4 Solve $(x - 4)^2 = 25$ for the $x$-intercepts of $y = (x - 4)^2 - 25$.
$x - 4 = \pm 5 \Rightarrow x = 9$ or $x = -1$.$(9, 0)$ and $(-1, 0)$
Quick Check · 5 questions
Show Your Working · 3 questions
Q6. For $y = x^2 - 25$, find: (a) the $y$-intercept; (b) the $x$-intercepts (show working).
Q7. Find the $x$-intercepts and $y$-intercept of $y = (x + 2)^2 - 16$. Show all working.
Q8. Without solving algebraically, decide how many $x$-intercepts each parabola has. Briefly justify each answer using direction and vertex. (a) $y = -2(x - 1)^2 + 8$; (b) $y = (x + 5)^2$; (c) $y = 4x^2 + 7$.
Quick Check
1. A — $y = -4$, point $(0, -4)$.
2. C — $x^2 = 4 \Rightarrow x = \pm 2$.
3. D — vertex above, opens up: none.
4. B — $x = 1 \pm 3$, giving $4$ and $-2$.
5. C — vertex on $x$-axis $\Rightarrow$ one repeated root.
Show Your Working Model Answers
Q6 (3 marks): (a) Sub $x = 0$: $y = -25$. $y$-intercept $(0, -25)$ [1]. (b) Set $y = 0$: $x^2 - 25 = 0 \Rightarrow x^2 = 25 \Rightarrow x = \pm 5$ [1]. Intercepts $(5, 0)$ and $(-5, 0)$ [1].
Q7 (3 marks): $y$-intercept: $y = (0 + 2)^2 - 16 = 4 - 16 = -12$, so $(0, -12)$ [1]. Set $y = 0$: $(x + 2)^2 = 16 \Rightarrow x + 2 = \pm 4$ [1]. $x = 2$ or $x = -6$, so $(2, 0)$ and $(-6, 0)$ [1].
Q8 (3 marks): (a) Opens down ($a = -2$); vertex $(1, 8)$ above $x$-axis: opposite signs $\Rightarrow$ TWO intercepts [1]. (b) Vertex $(-5, 0)$ ON the $x$-axis: ONE repeated intercept [1]. (c) Opens up ($a = 4$); vertex $(0, 7)$ above the $x$-axis: same signs $\Rightarrow$ NONE [1].
Reverse Engineering Intercepts
A parabola in the form $y = (x - h)^2 + k$ has $x$-intercepts at $(1, 0)$ and $(7, 0)$. (a) State the axis of symmetry (it's the midpoint of the two roots). (b) Hence state $h$. (c) Find $k$ by substituting one intercept and solving. (d) Write the equation and find the $y$-intercept.
Reveal solution
(a) Midpoint: $(1 + 7)/2 = 4$. Axis $x = 4$. (b) $h = 4$. (c) Sub $(1, 0)$: $0 = (1 - 4)^2 + k = 9 + k$, so $k = -9$. (d) $y = (x - 4)^2 - 9$. $y$-intercept: sub $x = 0$: $y = 16 - 9 = 7$, so $(0, 7)$.
$y$-intercept
Sub $x = 0$; always exists
$x$-intercepts
Sub $y = 0$; may have 0, 1, or 2
Vertex on $x$-axis
$k = 0$: one repeated root
Two crossings
$a$ and $k$ opposite signs
No crossings
$a$ and $k$ same signs
Vertex form
$x = h \pm \sqrt{-k/a}$
Your Badges
0 of 6Mark lesson as complete
Tick when you've finished Learn, Practice and the Stretch. Earns +85 XP and +25 coins.