This Grade 4 worksheet applies area and perimeter to real-world word problems involving gardens, rooms, pools, and posters. Students decide whether to multiply for area or add for perimeter, then compute carefully. A matching activity reinforces the difference between square units and linear units, building flexible problem-solving aligned to CCSS 4.MD.3. Students apply both formulas to garden, room, and yard scenarios, building Grade 4 confidence with realistic measurement problem solving.

Style:
Busy Bee
Area and Perimeter (Advanced)
Grade 4
★ Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) Maya's garden is 8 m long and 5 m wide. The area is 40 square meters.
2) Maya's 8 m by 5 m garden has perimeter 26 meters.
3) A bedroom rug is 7 ft by 4 ft. The area is 28 square feet.
4) A rectangular pool is 15 m long and 6 m wide. The perimeter is 42 meters.
5) A square poster has side 9 in. Its area is 81 square inches.
6) An L-shape is split into a 6 cm by 4 cm rectangle and a 3 cm by 2 cm rectangle. Total area is 30 square centimeters.
7) A classroom is 11 m by 8 m. Its area is 88 square meters.
8) A rectangular field is 20 ft long and 12 ft wide. Its perimeter is 64 feet.
9) A T-shape is split into a 5 in by 2 in rectangle and a 3 in by 4 in rectangle. The total area is 22 square inches.
★ Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1) Match each item to its correct answer.
Rectangle 9 m by 4 m: area
36 square meters
30 square centimeters
Square side 7 ft: perimeter
28 feet
22 inches
Rectangle 6 in by 5 in: perimeter
22 inches
28 feet
Rectangle 10 cm by 3 cm: area
30 square centimeters
36 square meters
🎯

Ready to Practice?

Complete each section carefully.

10 Questions
10-15 minutes
Auto-graded
Retry anytime
🏆
Questions Correct
0
Correct
0
Incorrect
0
Skipped
0:00
Time
0%
Score
Great work!

Review Your Answers

See what you got right, missed, or skipped.