Place value up to hundred-thousands

Place value up to hundred-thousands

Place value up to hundred-thousands

Each digit in a number sits in a place, and each place has its own value. Read the digits from left to right and you can name any number.

The places we use

Hundred-thousandsTen-thousandsThousandsHundredsTensOnes
285472

The number above is 285 472.

The digit 8 in this number is not just "eight" — it sits in the ten-thousands place and means 80 000.

Naming the places

Six words to remember:

  • ones — the rightmost digit (loose marbles),
  • tens — second from the right (10 marbles in a bag),
  • hundreds — third (100 marbles on a shelf),
  • thousands — fourth (1 000 in a cabinet),
  • ten-thousands — fifth (10 000 in a room),
  • hundred-thousands — sixth (100 000 on a floor).

For 5 906 we read "five thousand nine hundred and six": the 5 is in thousands, the 9 in hundreds, the 0 in tens (none), the 6 in ones.

Expanded form

You can rewrite any number as the sum of its place values:

285 472 = 200 000 + 80 000 + 5 000 + 400 + 70 + 2

Think of each part as a different kind of container: 2 full floors, 8 full rooms, 5 full cabinets, 4 full shelves, 7 bags and 2 loose marbles.

More examples:

  • 30 058 = 30 000 + 50 + 8 (no hundreds; no thousands either, just ten-thousands)
  • 902 000 = 900 000 + 2 000 (no hundreds, tens or ones)
  • 6 007 = 6 000 + 7 (only thousands and ones)

Watch out for these

⚠️ A zero in the middle is important. Without it the whole number shrinks by a place:

  • 40 070 (forty thousand and seventy) ≠ 4 070 (four thousand and seventy).

⚠️ The same digit means a different amount in different places:

  • in 4 000 it means 4 000,
  • in 400 it means 400,
  • in 40 it means 40,
  • in 4 it means 4.

What's next

Try it out