Decimal Places vs Significant Figures
Decimal places and significant figures both describe precision, but they answer different questions. Decimal places count fixed positions after the decimal point. Significant figures count meaningful measured digits, no matter where the decimal point sits.
The quick difference
Use decimal places when the rounding position is fixed after the decimal point. Use significant figures when the answer must preserve measurement precision across small numbers, large numbers, or scientific notation.
Count only positions to the right of the decimal point.
Count meaningful digits from the first non-zero digit.
Add/subtract by decimal places. Multiply/divide by sig figs.
Decimal places vs significant figures table
| Question | Decimal places | Significant figures |
|---|---|---|
| What it counts | Digits after the decimal point | Meaningful digits starting with the first non-zero digit |
| Best used for | Fixed-place precision, especially addition and subtraction | Measurement precision across small, large, and scientific notation values |
| Example: 0.00450 | 5 decimal places | 3 significant figures |
| Example: 305.459 rounded to 2 | 305.46 | 310, or 3.1 x 10^2 |
| Chemistry operation rule | Use for addition and subtraction | Use for multiplication and division |
Which rule should I use?
Are you only being asked to round a number to decimal places?
Use decimal places. Count positions after the decimal point and round at that fixed place.
Are you being asked to round a measurement to sig figs?
Use significant figures. Start counting at the first non-zero digit and keep the requested number of meaningful digits.
Are you adding or subtracting measured values?
Use decimal places. The final answer keeps the fewest decimal places from the measured inputs.
Are you multiplying or dividing measured values?
Use significant figures. The final answer keeps the fewest sig figs from the measured inputs.
Rounding examples side by side
| Value | Target | Decimal places | Sig figs | Why they differ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 305.459 | 2 places or figures | 305.46 | 310 or 3.1 x 10^2 | Decimal places keep two digits after the decimal. Sig figs keep the first two meaningful digits, 3 and 0, then round on 5. |
| 0.004567 | 2 places or figures | 0.00 | 0.0046 | Two decimal places stop at the hundredths place. Two sig figs ignore leading zeros and keep 4 and 5. |
| 12.345 | 3 places or figures | 12.345 | 12.3 | Three decimal places keep all three digits after the decimal. Three sig figs keep 1, 2, and 3. |
| 9.995 | 3 places or figures | 9.995 | 10.0 or 1.00 x 10^1 | Three decimal places leaves the number unchanged. Three sig figs rounds through a carry and needs a trailing zero to show precision. |
How the rule changes by operation
| Operation | Problem | Raw value | Rule | Final answer | Why |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addition | 12.52 + 3.1 | 15.62 | Decimal places | 15.6 | 3.1 has one decimal place, so the sum is rounded to one decimal place. |
| Subtraction | 28.1 - 25.03 | 3.07 | Decimal places | 3.1 | 28.1 is only reported to tenths, so the difference is reported to tenths. |
| Multiplication | 2.5 x 3.42 | 8.55 | Significant figures | 8.6 | 2.5 has 2 sig figs, so the product is rounded to 2 sig figs. |
| Division | 2.50 / 1.2 | 2.0833... | Significant figures | 2.1 | 1.2 has 2 sig figs, so the quotient is rounded to 2 sig figs. |
Common mistakes
Rounding to 2 decimal places when the question asks for 2 significant figures.
Counting leading zeros as significant figures in small decimals such as 0.00450.
Using the sig fig count rule for addition and subtraction instead of the decimal-place rule.
Using decimal places for multiplication and division when the answer should follow the fewest sig figs.
Dropping a trailing zero that communicates precision, such as changing 10.0 to 10.
Frequently asked questions
Are decimal places and significant figures the same?
No. Decimal places count digits after the decimal point. Significant figures count meaningful digits starting with the first non-zero digit. A number can have many decimal places but only a few significant figures.
When should I use decimal places instead of significant figures?
Use decimal places when the question directly asks for decimal places, or when you are adding or subtracting measured values. In addition and subtraction, the final answer keeps the fewest decimal places from the input values.
When should I use significant figures instead of decimal places?
Use significant figures when the question asks for sig figs, when comparing measurement precision, or when multiplying and dividing measured values. The final answer keeps the fewest significant figures from the measured inputs.
Why does addition use decimal places but multiplication uses sig figs?
Addition and subtraction compare the place value of the last reliable digit, such as tenths or hundredths. Multiplication and division compare relative precision, so the total number of significant figures controls the final answer.
Is 0.00450 five decimal places or three significant figures?
It is both: 0.00450 has five decimal places and three significant figures. The zeros before 4 are not significant, but the final zero after 5 is significant because it shows measured precision.
What is 305.459 rounded to 2 decimal places and 2 significant figures?
Rounded to 2 decimal places, 305.459 is 305.46. Rounded to 2 significant figures, it is 310, or 3.1 x 10^2 if you want to show the precision clearly.