Lines of Symmetry

In a Nutshell

A line of symmetry divides a shape into two halves that are mirror images of each other. Regular polygons have as many lines of symmetry as they have sides.

If you can fold a shape along a line and both halves match exactly, that line is a line of symmetry (also called a mirror line).

Key facts to remember:

  • An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry.
  • A square has 4 lines of symmetry.
  • A regular pentagon has 5 lines of symmetry.
  • A rectangle (non-square) has 2 lines of symmetry.
  • An isosceles triangle has 1 line of symmetry.
  • A parallelogram (non-rectangle) has 0 lines of symmetry.
  • A circle has infinitely many lines of symmetry.

In general, a regular polygon with nn sides has nn lines of symmetry.

Explore: lines of symmetry

Lines of symmetry An interactive diagram showing lines of symmetry for common 2D shapes. Equilateral triangle 3 lines of symmetry

Use Next and Prev to cycle through shapes, and Show lines to reveal their lines of symmetry.

Watch it work

Question: How many lines of symmetry does a regular hexagon have? Describe where they go.

Have a go

Q1. How many lines of symmetry does a scalene triangle have?

Q2. How many lines of symmetry does a rhombus have?

Q3. A regular octagon has how many lines of symmetry?

Q4. Draw or describe the line of symmetry of the letter A.

Q5. Does a kite have any lines of symmetry? If so, how many?