Surface area is the total area of all outer faces and curved surfaces of a three-dimensional object. It is measured in square units such as cm2, m2, or ft2.

Definition

Surface area answers the question: how much material would you need to completely cover a 3D shape? Think of wrapping a gift box — the wrapping paper you use equals the box's surface area.

Key idea: Surface area = sum of the areas of every face or curved surface on the outside of a solid.

Surface Area vs Volume

Surface area measures the outside of a shape (in square units). Volume measures the inside (in cubic units). Doubling the radius of a sphere quadruples its surface area but increases volume eightfold. See surface area vs volume for more.

How to Find Surface Area

  1. Identify the shape — cube, cylinder, sphere, prism, etc.
  2. Choose the formula — each shape has a specific equation (see our formulas chart).
  3. Measure dimensions — radius, height, side lengths.
  4. Substitute and calculate — plug values into the formula.
  5. Write the answer in square units — always cm², m², ft², etc.

Common Formulas at a Glance

ShapeFormula
Cube6s²
Rectangular prism2(lw + lh + wh)
Cylinder2πr² + 2πrh
Sphere4πr²
Coneπr² + πrl
Triangular prismbh + (a + b + c)H

Worked Example — Rectangular Prism

Given: l = 5 cm, w = 3 cm, h = 4 cm
SA = 2(lw + lh + wh) = 2(15 + 20 + 12) = 2 × 47 = 94 cm²

Real-World Uses

Surface area matters whenever you cover, coat, or wrap something: painting rooms, sizing packaging, estimating pipe insulation, and calculating drug dosing from body surface area.

Use our Sphere, Cylinder, Cone, Cube, and Rectangular Prism calculators for instant results.