Enter a linear inequality in the form ax + b > c (or <, ≥, ≤). Supports positive and negative coefficients.
x +
Solution
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Quick examples:
Inequality Calculator FAQ
Common questions about solving and graphing inequalities.
Solve a linear inequality just like an equation — isolate x using addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division. The critical rule: if you multiply or divide by a negative number, flip the inequality sign.
Example: 2x + 3 > 7 → 2x > 4 → x > 2
Example: 2x + 3 > 7 → 2x > 4 → x > 2
Multiplying or dividing by a negative number reverses the order on the number line. For example, 3 > 1 is true. Multiply both sides by −1: −3 and −1 — but now −3 < −1. The relationship flipped, so the sign must flip too to keep the statement true.
Interval notation uses brackets and parentheses to show the solution set:
- ( ) — endpoint excluded (strict inequality < or >)
- [ ] — endpoint included (≤ or ≥)
- Infinity always uses ( )
< means "strictly less than" — the boundary value is NOT part of the solution. On a number line, shown with an open circle ○.
≤ means "less than or equal to" — the boundary value IS included. On a number line, shown with a filled circle ●.
≤ means "less than or equal to" — the boundary value IS included. On a number line, shown with a filled circle ●.
Divide both sides by −3 — and because you're dividing by a negative, flip the sign:
−3x ≤ 9 → x ≥ −3
Solution: x ≥ −3, or in interval notation: [−3, ∞)
−3x ≤ 9 → x ≥ −3
Solution: x ≥ −3, or in interval notation: [−3, ∞)