The IB Math AA HL formula booklet is one of the most important resources for students taking IB Mathematics: Analysis and Approaches Higher Level. Knowing what formulas are included, how to use them, and what is not provided can make a big difference in your final exam performance.
The formula booklet is provided during:
Paper 1 (No calculator)
Paper 2 (Calculator allowed)
You do not bring your own copy. The exam invigilator provides a clean copy at the start of each paper.
The booklet is the same for all students worldwide and is designed to:
Reduce memorization pressure
Test understanding instead of rote learning
Support complex problem-solving
However, not every formula is included, so preparation is still essential.
The formula booklet is provided during:
Paper 1 (No calculator)
Paper 2 (Calculator allowed)
You do not bring your own copy. The exam invigilator provides a clean copy at the start of each paper.
The booklet is the same for all students worldwide and is designed to:
Reduce memorization pressure
Test understanding instead of rote learning
Support complex problem-solving
However, not every formula is included, so preparation is still essential.
The booklet includes formulas from major syllabus areas, such as:
Quadratic formula
Laws of logarithms
Arithmetic and geometric sequences and series
Common function properties
Transformations
Inverse functions
Trigonometric ratios
Sine rule and cosine rule
Double angle formulas
Basic differentiation rules
Standard integration formulas
Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
Mean, variance, and standard deviation formulas
Binomial distribution formula
Normal distribution notation
These formulas support calculations but do not explain when or how to apply them — that understanding must come from practice.
This is where many students lose marks.
The IB Math AA HL formula booklet does NOT include:
Step-by-step methods
Proofs
Many advanced HL-specific results
Problem-solving strategies
For example:
You must know how to apply calculus concepts, not just read formulas.
You must understand how to set up equations, not rely on the booklet.
This is why concept mastery is critical.
Don’t wait until exam day. Practice using the formula booklet during revision so you know exactly where each formula is.
Memorization is not enough. You should know:
When to use a formula
What each symbol means
How it connects to exam-style questions
The booklet supports your work, but you must still:
Set up problems correctly
Show logical reasoning
Interpret final answers
Many students misunderstand the role of the formula booklet. Common mistakes include:
Assuming all formulas are provided
Wasting time searching for formulas
Using the wrong formula for a problem
Ignoring units and conditions
Avoid these by practicing under timed conditions.
The IB does not expect you to memorize everything — but it does expect understanding.
The formula booklet:
Helps reduce memory load
Does NOT replace learning concepts
Rewards students who understand relationships
Smart students use the booklet as a tool, not a shortcut.
To revise effectively:
Practice past papers with the booklet
Highlight formulas you use often
Note formulas that are not included
Combine formula use with concept revision
This approach builds speed, accuracy, and confidence.

IB Demystified is a trusted online learning platform led by certified IB examiners and educators.
© 2026 IB Demystified LTD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Powered by AfiaDigital
WhatsApp us