Hi! Today we’re learning the laws of indices — also called the rules of powers. Don’t worry about the long name. These are simple shortcuts that save you from doing tons of multiplication. Once you learn them, problems that look scary become really easy. Let’s begin slow and build up step by step.
Let’s start with the basics. When you write something like 2⁵, you have two parts:
And what does 2⁵ actually mean? It just means “multiply 2 by itself, 5 times”:
Easy way to picture it: imagine you have one chocolate bar. Every day, the number doubles. Day 1 you have 2 bars, day 2 you have 4, day 3 you have 8, day 4 you have 16, day 5 you have 32. That’s exactly 2⁵. Powers describe things that grow by multiplying — like money in a savings account, or followers on Instagram, or bacteria in a dish.
So always remember: indices = repeated multiplication. Every rule below is just a smart way to count how many times the base appears.
I’ll explain each rule with a simple example. Don’t try to memorise them all at once — read the why behind each one and they’ll naturally stick in your head.
Anything raised to the power of 1 is just itself. There’s nothing to calculate — it stays the same.
Any non-zero number raised to the power of 0 is 1. Yes — even something huge like 1000⁰ is just 1!
If two terms have the same base and you’re multiplying them, just add the powers together. Don’t multiply the powers — that’s a different rule!
Same base, but this time you’re dividing. Subtract the bottom power from the top power.
If a power is raised to another power, multiply the two powers together.
If two things are multiplied inside a bracket, and there’s a power outside, the power applies to each thing separately.
If a fraction has a power on the outside, raise both the top (numerator) and the bottom (denominator) to that power.
A minus sign in the power does NOT make the answer negative. It tells you to take the reciprocal — that means flip the number into a fraction.
If the power is a fraction with 1 on top, the bottom number tells you what root to take. Power of 12 = square root, power of 13 = cube root, and so on.
That’s all 9 rules! Take a moment to look at them as a group. They might seem random at first, but they’re all just different ways of counting how many times the base shows up. Multiply = add powers. Divide = subtract powers. Power-on-power = multiply powers. Once you see this pattern, half the work is done.
This is the part students mess up most often, so I want to spend a little extra time on it. The biggest mistake I see is students writing things like:
2⁻³ = −8 ❌ (WRONG!)
Here’s the truth:
2⁻³ = 12³ = 18 = 0.125 ✓
A positive number with a negative power is still positive — it just becomes smaller, not negative. Look at this pattern:
The numbers shrink as the power becomes more negative. They never turn negative themselves.
Speed trick: when you see a fraction with a negative power, flip it. (52)⁻³ becomes (25)³ = 8125. Way faster than calculating it the long way.
Powers don’t always have to be whole numbers. Sometimes you’ll see fractions like 12, 23, or 54 in the power. When that happens, you’re being asked to take a root.
Here’s the full general rule that combines roots and powers:
In simple words: the bottom number is the root, the top number is the power. You can do either one first — the answer is the same.
Let me walk you through 823:
You could also do it the other way: 8² = 64, then ³√64 = 4. Same answer, but you’re working with bigger, scarier numbers. Always take the root first when possible — it keeps the numbers small and easier to handle.
No stress — just handle each thing one at a time. Negative means flip. Fraction means root.
Let’s try 16−34:
Here’s a super useful idea that comes up all the time in IB exams.
The index laws ONLY work when the bases are the same. So if you see something like 2⁵ × 8³, you can’t just add the powers — because 2 and 8 are different bases.
BUT — wait! Notice that 8 is actually 2³. So if we rewrite 8 as 2³, suddenly both terms have the same base, and we can use our rules.
Three rules in three steps, and a messy expression became one clean power. That’s the magic of changing the base.
To use this trick well, you need to spot when one number is actually a power of another. These come up over and over in IB questions, so memorise them now:
Powers of 2: 4 = 2² | 8 = 2³ | 16 = 2⁴ | 32 = 2⁵ | 64 = 2⁶ | 128 = 2⁷ | 256 = 2⁸
Powers of 3: 9 = 3² | 27 = 3³ | 81 = 3⁴ | 243 = 3⁵
Powers of 5: 25 = 5² | 125 = 5³ | 625 = 5⁴
Bonus tip: 64 can be written as 2⁶ OR 4³ OR 8². Some numbers are powers of more than one base — pick whichever makes your problem easier.
Everything we’ve learned works for algebra too. The base can be a letter (x, y, p, q…) instead of a number, and the rules don’t change one bit.
A few quick examples:
And when there are numbers AND letters together (like 3x²), treat them as separate jobs:
The 3 and 4 are coefficients — multiply them like normal numbers (3 × 4 = 12). The x² and x⁵ have the same base (x), so add the powers (2 + 5 = 7). Done.
Simplify: 5x³ × 2x⁴ × x
Answer:
Simplify: 6a⁵b³2a²b
Answer:
Simplify: (2x³y⁻²)⁴
Answer:
Evaluate: 3225
Answer:
Write 9 × 27² × 3⁻⁴ as a single power of 3.
Answer:
The index laws are NOT in the formula booklet. You have to memorise them. Make a flashcard for each rule and revise them every couple of days — within a week they’ll be locked in for life.
Read the question carefully. If it says “leave your answer in index form,” don’t evaluate it — leave it as 3⁴, not 81. If it says “give a numerical answer,” then yes, work it out.
For Paper 1 (no calculator), the change-the-base trick is your best friend. Practise spotting when numbers like 8, 16, 27, 81, 125 are powers of smaller bases.
Final word from your teacher: indices look complicated because of the symbols, but they’re just shortcuts for “I’m multiplying the same thing many times.” If you ever forget a rule mid-exam, write the expression out the long way for two seconds — the rule will reveal itself. Practise around 15–20 mixed questions and these will become muscle memory. You’ve got this!
Get 1-on-1 help from an IB examiner who knows exactly what Paper 1 & 2 are looking for.