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Rounding example

Round to 3 Significant Figures

Learn how to round any number to 3 significant figures with clear steps, worked examples, and common mistakes for decimals, whole numbers, and scientific notation.

Question
Round any number to 3 significant figures
Answer
Keep the first three significant digits, then use the fourth significant digit to decide whether to round up or down.
Target precision
3 sig figs
Keep
first 3 significant digits
Decision digit
4th significant digit
Round up when
4th digit is 5-9
Round down when
4th digit is 0-4

Step-by-step explanation

1

Find the first non-zero digit. That digit is the first significant figure; any zeros before it are only placeholders.

2

Count three significant digits from that starting point. These are the digits that should remain in the rounded answer.

3

Look at the fourth significant digit. If it is 5 or greater, increase the third significant digit by 1. If it is 4 or less, leave the third digit unchanged.

4

Drop the remaining digits after rounding. For whole-number results with trailing zeros, use scientific notation when you need to show exactly 3 significant figures.

Worked examples

Input
24.753
Result
24.8

The first three significant digits are 2, 4, and 7. The fourth significant digit is 5, so 24.7 rounds up to 24.8.

Input
0.004567
Result
0.00457

Ignore the leading zeros, keep 4, 5, and 6, then look at 7. Because 7 is at least 5, the 6 rounds up to 7.

Input
432,500
Result
4.33 x 10^5

Keep 4, 3, and 2, then look at 5. Rounding up gives 433,000; scientific notation makes the 3 significant figures explicit.

Input
9.995
Result
10.0 or 1.00 x 10^1

Keeping 9, 9, and 9 then rounding on 5 creates a carry. The trailing zero in 10.0 or 1.00 x 10^1 preserves exactly 3 significant figures.

Input
0.099949
Result
0.0999

The first three significant digits are 9, 9, and 9. The fourth significant digit is 4, so the kept digits do not round up.

Why this answer is correct

Why the fourth significant digit controls the rounding

Rounding to 3 significant figures means the answer should keep three meaningful digits. The digit immediately after those three tells you whether the third kept digit should stay the same or increase by one.

Why 3 significant figures is not 3 decimal places

Three significant figures count meaningful digits from the first non-zero digit. Three decimal places count places after the decimal point. For example, 0.004567 to 3 significant figures is 0.00457, not 0.005.

Why scientific notation helps with large answers

Answers such as 433,000 or 10.0 can be misread if the trailing zeros are not clearly significant. Scientific notation shows the precision directly: 4.33 x 10^5 and 1.00 x 10^1 both contain exactly 3 significant figures.

Common mistakes to avoid

Rounding to 3 decimal places instead of 3 significant figures.

Counting leading zeros as significant in small decimals such as 0.004567.

Dropping a needed trailing zero after a carry, such as writing 10 instead of 10.0 when the result needs 3 significant figures.

Leaving large whole-number answers ambiguous when scientific notation would show the exact precision.

Rounding twice during a longer calculation. Keep extra digits while calculating, then round the final answer to 3 significant figures.

Frequently asked questions

What does round to 3 significant figures mean?

It means the final answer should keep exactly three meaningful digits. You keep the first three significant digits and use the fourth significant digit to decide whether to round the third one up.

What is 24.753 rounded to 3 significant figures?

24.753 rounded to 3 significant figures is 24.8 because the fourth significant digit is 5.

What is 0.004567 rounded to 3 significant figures?

0.004567 rounded to 3 significant figures is 0.00457. The leading zeros do not count as significant figures.

Is 3 significant figures the same as 3 decimal places?

No. Three significant figures count meaningful digits from the first non-zero digit, while three decimal places count fixed positions after the decimal point.

How do I show exactly 3 significant figures in a large whole number?

Use scientific notation when trailing zeros could be ambiguous. For example, write 433,000 as 4.33 x 10^5 to show exactly 3 significant figures.

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