Maths GCSE: Turning Recurring Decimals into Fractions (Without Panic)
Recurring decimals look scary at first glance. Lots of dots, mysterious bars, and teachers saying “this always comes up in the exam”.
The good news? There’s a very reliable method. Once you see why it works, it stops feeling like magic and starts feeling logical.
What is a recurring decimal?
A recurring decimal is one where one digit or a group of digits repeats forever.
Examples:
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0.333…
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0.121212…
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2.454545…
You’ll often see a dot or a bar over the repeating digits.
The key idea (this is the bit to remember)
We:
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Call the number x
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Multiply x so the repeating digits line up
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Subtract to eliminate the repeating part
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Solve the equation
That’s it. Same steps every time.
Example 1:
Convert 0.333… to a fraction
Let
x = 0.333…
Multiply both sides by 10 (because one digit repeats):
10x = 3.333…
Now subtract the original equation:
10x − x = 3.333… − 0.333…
9x = 3
x = 3 ÷ 9 = 1⁄3
So:
0.333… = 1⁄3
Example 2:
Convert 0.121212… to a fraction
Let
x = 0.121212…
Two digits repeat, so multiply by 100:
100x = 12.121212…
Subtract:
100x − x = 12.121212… − 0.121212…
99x = 12
x = 12 ÷ 99
Simplify → 4⁄33
Example 3 (the exam favourite):
Convert 2.454545… to a fraction
Let
x = 2.454545…
Multiply by 100:
100x = 245.454545…
Subtract:
100x − x = 245.454545… − 2.454545…
99x = 243
x = 243 ÷ 99
Simplify → 27⁄11
Common exam mistakes to avoid
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❌ Multiplying by 10 when two digits repeat
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❌ Forgetting to subtract the original equation
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❌ Leaving the fraction unsimplified
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❌ Panicking when the question looks long (it isn’t!)
Why examiners love this topic
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It tests algebra
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It tests number sense
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It’s very method-driven
If you know the steps, it’s almost guaranteed marks.
Final thought
Recurring decimals aren’t about memorising tricks.
They’re about spotting patterns and using algebra to tidy up infinity.
Once that clicks, these questions become some of the most predictable marks in GCSE Maths.











