Surface Area of a Right Rectangular Prism
This post about finding the surface area of a right rectangular prism is part of a series of posts to help you prepare for the Advanced Algebra and Functions part of the Accuplacer test.
Question
What is the surface area of the right rectangular prism shown? Its length is 6, its width is 5, and its height is 4.

Right rectangular prism for the example
Solution
Sidebar: Surface Area of a Right Rectangular Prism
A right rectangular prism is the shape of a box with a rectangle for a bottom, with sides perpendicular to its bottom, and with a flat top parallel to its bottom. It’s your typical box.
A right rectangular prism’s surface area is the sum of the areas of all its faces: the top, the bottom, and the four sides. The area of each side is length times width.
This box has six sides, three pairs of congruent sides.
- Let’s start with the side that stares you in the face on the diagram. It measures 4 x 5, so its area is 20. There is an identical piece in the back with the same area; the area of the two together is 2 times 20 = 40.
- Now consider the sides on the left and right. (In the diagram, you can’t see the side on the left.) Each of those sides measures 6 x 4, so each one’s area is 24. The area of the two together is 2 times 24 = 48.
- The top has a length of 6 and a width of 5, so its area is 6 X 5 = 30. The bottom has the same area, so the area of the two together is 2 times 30 = 60.
Then the surface area of the whole prism is
And the answer is 148 square units.

Right rectangular prism for formula
In general
The formula for the surface area of a right rectangular prism — a box — is
where SA surface area and h, w, and l are as shown on the box on the right.
This question is similar to question number 3 in the sample questions for the Accuplacer Advanced Algebra and Functions test.