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Math5 min readApril 4, 2026

Circumference and Area of a Circle — Formulas and Worked Examples

Complete guide to circle calculations: circumference, area, sectors, arcs, and annuli — with the formulas and step-by-step worked examples.

Circles appear everywhere — wheels, pipes, circular rooms, pizza, planets. Two measurements define every circle completely: the circumference (the distance around the edge) and the area (the space inside). Both follow directly from a single value: the radius.

Key Terms

Radius (r): The distance from the centre of the circle to any point on its edge. This is the fundamental measurement — all circle formulas use it.

Diameter (d): The distance across the circle through the centre. Always exactly twice the radius: d = 2r.

Circumference (C): The perimeter of the circle — the total distance around the outside edge.

Area (A): The amount of two-dimensional space enclosed by the circle.

π (pi): The ratio of any circle's circumference to its diameter. It is irrational (never-ending, never-repeating) and approximately equal to 3.14159265...

Circumference Formula

C = 2πr    or equivalently    C = πd

Example: A circle with radius 5 cm

C = 2 × π × 5 = 10π ≈ 31.42 cm

In terms of diameter: If given the diameter directly:

C = π × d = π × 10 = 10π ≈ 31.42 cm

Both give the same answer — choose whichever measurement you have.

Area Formula

A = πr²

Example: Same circle with radius 5 cm

A = π × 5² = 25π ≈ 78.54 cm²

Note: area is always in square units (cm², m², in²). Circumference is in linear units (cm, m, in).

Working Backwards from Circumference or Area

Sometimes you know the circumference or area and need to find the radius.

Radius from circumference:

r = C / (2π)

Radius from area:

r = √(A / π)

Diameter from circumference:

d = C / π

Example: A circular field has circumference 150 m. What is its area?

Step 1: Find radius

r = 150 / (2π) = 150 / 6.2832 = 23.87 m

Step 2: Find area

A = π × 23.87² = π × 569.8 ≈ 1,790 m²

Common Worked Examples

Circular pipe cross-section

A pipe has internal diameter 40 mm. What is the cross-sectional area?

r = 40 / 2 = 20 mm
A = π × 20² = 400π ≈ 1,257 mm²

This matters for flow rate calculations — the area determines how much fluid can pass through.

Running track

A circular running track has radius 40 m. How far is one lap?

C = 2π × 40 = 80π ≈ 251.3 m

(Standard 400 m tracks are actually oval, not circular — but this shows the principle.)

Pizza size comparison

Is a 14-inch pizza worth more than two 10-inch pizzas?

14-inch pizza:

A = π × 7² = 49π ≈ 153.9 in²

Two 10-inch pizzas:

A = 2 × π × 5² = 2 × 25π = 50π ≈ 157.1 in²

Two 10-inch pizzas give very slightly more pizza — but only if the price is comparable.

Sectors and Arcs

A sector is a "slice" of a circle (like a pie slice), defined by a central angle θ.

Arc length (the curved edge of the sector):

Arc = (θ / 360) × 2πr    [degrees]
Arc = θr                   [radians]

Sector area:

Sector area = (θ / 360) × πr²    [degrees]
Sector area = ½r²θ               [radians]

Example: Sector with radius 8 cm and central angle 45°

Arc length = (45 / 360) × 2π × 8 = (1/8) × 16π = 2π ≈ 6.28 cm
Sector area = (45 / 360) × π × 64 = (1/8) × 64π = 8π ≈ 25.13 cm²

Annulus (Ring Shape)

An annulus is the region between two concentric circles with radii R (outer) and r (inner).

Annulus area = π(R² − r²) = π(R + r)(R − r)

Example: A circular border with outer radius 10 m and inner radius 7 m:

Area = π(10² − 7²) = π(100 − 49) = 51π ≈ 160.2 m²

Summary of Formulas

| Measurement | Formula | |-------------|---------| | Circumference | C = 2πr = πd | | Area | A = πr² | | Radius from C | r = C / (2π) | | Radius from A | r = √(A/π) | | Arc length (degrees) | Arc = (θ/360) × 2πr | | Sector area (degrees) | A = (θ/360) × πr² | | Annulus area | A = π(R² − r²) |

Use our Circle Calculator to compute any circle measurement — enter any one value and get all the others instantly.

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