Square Root Calculator with Steps

Find the decimal value, simplified radical form, and step-by-step working for square, cube, and nth roots — instantly.

Type any number — the calculator updates instantly. Works with integers, decimals, and negatives.

Results

Enter a number above to see the result, simplified form, and step-by-step working.

Quick Answer

A square root calculator with steps finds the number that, multiplied by itself, equals your input — written √x, or the nth root ⁿ√x for higher degrees. This tool returns the decimal value, the simplified radical form (e.g. √72 = 6√2), and the full prime-factorization working.

Square Root Formula & Simplified Radical Form

The square root of x is the value y where y² = x. The general nth root extends this: ⁿ√x = x1/n. To simplify, factor the radicand and pull out any factor that repeats n times.


√x = y such that y² = x  ·  ⁿ√x = x1/n. Example: √72 = √(36 × 2) = 6√2.
Number (n)√n (decimal)Simplified radical
82.8282√2
123.4642√3
184.2433√2
507.0715√2
728.4856√2

How to Use the Square Root Calculator

  1. Type your number

    Enter the value you want the root of (the radicand), for example 72. Decimals and negative numbers work too.

  2. Pick the root degree

    Tap √ for square root, ∛ for cube root, ∜ for fourth root, or type a custom index n (up to 20).

  3. Read the answer

    The decimal value, the simplified radical form, and the step-by-step prime factorization update instantly as you type.

Simplifying the square root of 72 into 6√2 by prime factorization
Simplifying √72 to its radical form 6√2 by extracting the perfect-square factor.

Worked Examples: Square, Cube & Nth Roots

InputRootResultWorking
72Square (√)6√2 ≈ 8.48572 = 2³ × 3² → extract 3² and one 2: √(36 × 2) = 6√2
54Cube (∛)3∛2 ≈ 3.78054 = 2 × 3³ → extract 3³: ∛(27 × 2) = 3∛2
−9Square (√)3iNegative under an even root → imaginary: √−9 = √9 · i = 3i

A perfect square like 49 returns a whole number (7) with no radical; a number with no repeated factors (like 7) stays under the root as √7.

Frequently Asked Questions

For an even index (square, fourth…) the result is imaginary — √−9 returns 3i. For an odd index (cube, fifth…) the result is a real negative number — ∛−8 returns −2.

Yes. Use the “Custom n” box to set any index from 2 to 20 — the fifth root, tenth root, and so on. It simplifies and approximates them the same way.

6√2 is the exact simplified radical form, found by extracting the perfect-square factor (72 = 36 × 2). The decimal (≈ 8.485) is shown alongside as an approximation.
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