Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (2024)

  • Categories
  • Education and Communications
  • Studying
  • Mathematics
  • Fractions

Download Article

Explore this Article

methods

1Reading Decimal Numbers in Math

2Reading Monetary Decimal Numbers

Other Sections

Related Articles

References

Co-authored byHannah MaddenReviewed byGrace Imson, MA

Last Updated: September 14, 2022Fact Checked

Download Article

A decimal number is anything less than 1 that is not expressed by a fraction. Decimal points express the differentiation between the whole number and the less than whole number. If you are learning about decimal numbers and are having trouble reading them, say the whole number first, note where the decimal point is, and follow up with the numbers after the point to understand decimal numbers every time.

Method 1

Method 1 of 2:

Reading Decimal Numbers in Math

Download Article

  1. 1

    Say the number before the decimal point first. Decimal numbers are read left to right, just like normal numbers. Always start with the number that is to the left of the decimal place. This is the “whole” number. If there is no number before the decimal point, just say “zero.”[1]

    • For example, if the number is 6.27, start by saying “six.”

    Tip: If there is a zero in front of the decimal point, some people may skip saying “zero” all together and just go straight into saying “point” for the decimal point.

  2. 2

    Read “and” as the decimal point. The period, or decimal point, in the number can simply be read as “and.” Say the decimal directly after the number that is in front of it, or else it can get confusing. The decimal point determines which numbers are whole numbers and which numbers are not.[2]

    • For example, if the number is 6.27, you’d say “six and-”
    • Some people may say “point” for the decimal point instead of “and,” especially outside of a math class.

    Advertisem*nt

  3. 3

    Identify which place the last number is in after the decimal. It is important to be accurate when you are describing numbers in math. Determine which place the last number after the decimal is in by counting how many digits to the right of the decimal a number is. Then, add a 0 for each digit to the right.[3] Common decimal numbers end in the tenths, hundredths, or thousandths.[4]

    • For example, In the number 6.2, 2 is in the tenths place.
    • In the number 6.27, 7 is in the hundredths place.
    • In the number 6.275, 5 is in the thousandths place.
  4. 4

    Say the number after the decimal and add its numerical place to it. The number after the decimal has to be precise. Once you figure out what place the number is in, add that onto the number that you say after the decimal. This will make the decimal sound like a fraction, and it will be easier to work into equations in the future.[5]

    • For example, if the number is 6.2, say “six and two tenths.”
    • If the number is 6.27, say “six and twenty-seven hundredths.”
    • If the number is 6.275, say “six and two hundred seventy-five thousandths.”
    • If you are not doing a math equation, you can just read each number individually. For example, if your number is 6.27, say “six point two seven.”
  5. Advertisem*nt

Method 2

Method 2 of 2:

Reading Monetary Decimal Numbers

Download Article

  1. 1

    Say the number before the decimal point and “dollars.” It is important to note that you are talking about money when you first read it out. As you begin reading from left to right, say the number that is before the decimal point followed by the type of money you are using.[6]

    • For example, if the number is $4.50, start by saying “four dollars-”
  2. 2

    Say “and” as the decimal point. When talking about money, the numbers after the decimal point are an addition to the number before the decimal point. When you are talking about money, say “and” when you see a decimal point like you would with a regular decimal number.[7]

    • For example, if the number is $4.50, say “four dollars and-”
  3. 3

    Read the number after the decimal point and say “cents.” The numbers after the decimal point describe the amount of money that doesn’t make up a full dollar. Read the number after the decimal point as a whole number on its own. Say “cents” after the word to distinguish it from the first number.[8]

    • For example, if the number is $4.50, say “four dollars and fifty cents.”
    • If the number is $39.89, say “thirty-nine dollars and eighty-nine cents.”

    Tip: Cents can only go to the hundredths place, not above or below it. For example, the number $2.01 is two dollars and one cent.

  4. Advertisem*nt

Community Q&A

Search

Add New Question

  • Question

    How do you read this decimal number in words? 3.4953

    Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (12)

    Community Answer

    Three and four thousand, nine hundred fifty-three ten-thousandths.

    Thanks! We're glad this was helpful.
    Thank you for your feedback.
    If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission.Support wikiHow

    YesNo

    Not Helpful 3Helpful 1

  • Question

    Which is greater, 12.30 or 12.6?

    Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (13)

    Community Answer

    12.6. All you do is compare the first digit to the right of the decimal point. If those digits are the same, you'd compare the next digits to the right. For example, 12.75 is greater than 12.749. (You can think of 12.75 as 12.750.)

    Thanks! We're glad this was helpful.
    Thank you for your feedback.
    If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission.Support wikiHow

    YesNo

    Not Helpful 0Helpful 1

  • Question

    how do you say 0.07?

    Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (14)

    Community Answer

    That is 7/100 or "seven hundredths". (Some people will say "seven one-hundredths".)

    Thanks! We're glad this was helpful.
    Thank you for your feedback.
    If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission.Support wikiHow

    YesNo

    Not Helpful 0Helpful 0

See more answers

Ask a Question

200 characters left

Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.

Submit

      Advertisem*nt

      Submit a Tip

      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published

      Submit

      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!

      You Might Also Like

      How Do I Measure ¾ Cup?Easy-to-Follow Methods for Adding Fractions
      How toMultiply Fractions With Whole NumbersHow toType FractionsHow toAdd Fractions With Unlike DenominatorsHow toDivide Mixed FractionsHow toSolve Fraction Questions in MathHow toOrder Fractions From Least to GreatestHow toDivide Fractions by a Whole NumberHow toFind the Least Common DenominatorHow toDivide a Whole Number by a FractionHow toCalculate FractionsHow toDo FractionsHow toDivide Fractions by Fractions

      Advertisem*nt

      About This Article

      Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (29)

      Reviewed by:

      Grace Imson, MA

      Math Teacher

      This article was reviewed by Grace Imson, MA and by wikiHow staff writer, Hannah Madden. Grace Imson is a math teacher with over 40 years of teaching experience. Grace is currently a math instructor at the City College of San Francisco and was previously in the Math Department at Saint Louis University. She has taught math at the elementary, middle, high school, and college levels. She has an MA in Education, specializing in Administration and Supervision from Saint Louis University. This article has been viewed 98,165 times.

      67 votes - 69%

      Co-authors: 5

      Updated: September 14, 2022

      Views:98,165

      Categories: Fractions

      In other languages

      Spanish

      Portuguese

      • Print
      • Send fan mail to authors

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 98,165 times.

      Reader Success Stories

      • Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (30)

        Valeria Sotomayor

        Aug 31, 2020

        "This help me cause now I know that the dollar comes before the decimal."

      More reader storiesHide reader stories

      Did this article help you?

      Advertisem*nt

      Easy Ways to Read Decimal Numbers: 7 Steps (with Pictures) (2024)

      References

      Top Articles
      Latest Posts
      Article information

      Author: Velia Krajcik

      Last Updated:

      Views: 5978

      Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

      Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

      Author information

      Name: Velia Krajcik

      Birthday: 1996-07-27

      Address: 520 Balistreri Mount, South Armand, OR 60528

      Phone: +466880739437

      Job: Future Retail Associate

      Hobby: Polo, Scouting, Worldbuilding, Cosplaying, Photography, Rowing, Nordic skating

      Introduction: My name is Velia Krajcik, I am a handsome, clean, lucky, gleaming, magnificent, proud, glorious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.