The cylinder surface area formulaSA = 2πrh + 2πr² — comes from unrolling the shape into a flat net of three simple pieces.

From 3D Shape to 2D Net

Every cylinder is made of exactly three parts when flattened: two identical circles (the top and bottom bases) and one rectangle (the lateral face that wraps around).

Deriving the Lateral Area

Key insight: The unrolled rectangle's width = circumference of the circle = 2πr
Height = h

Lateral Area = 2πr × h = 2πrh

Adding the Bases

Each base = πr²
Two bases = 2πr²

Total Cylinder SA = 2πrh + 2πr² = 2πr(h + r)

Example: r = 4 cm, h = 10 cm
SA = 2π(4)(10 + 4) = 2π(56) = 351.86 cm²

Open vs Closed Cylinder Variants

VariantFormulaReal-World Example
Closed (both ends)2πrh + 2πr²Sealed can, gas tank
Open top2πrh + πr²Cup, bucket, pool
Open both ends2πrhPipe, tube, tunnel
The Key Insight: When reassembled, the rectangle's width must exactly match the circle's circumference (2πr) — this is why π appears in the lateral area formula.

Why This Derivation Matters

Understanding the net makes it impossible to forget the formula — you can always re-derive it on an exam by picturing the three flat pieces.

Calculate Cylinder Surface Area

Use our Cylinder Calculator for instant results. See cone net derivation, SA vs lateral area, and pipe insulation.