Arithmetic Progressions is one of the most important chapters in Class 10 Maths because it helps students understand patterns, sequences, formulas, and sum-based questions in a very structured way. This chapter is highly scoring in board exams because once the formulas and concepts are clear, most questions become direct and manageable.

Many students feel confused at the beginning because they see many formulas like common difference, aₙ, Sₙ, arithmetic mean, and term-based shortcuts all at once. But the chapter becomes much easier once students understand the basic idea behind an AP. The full chapter is built on one simple observation: the difference between consecutive terms remains constant.

At Deeksha Vedantu, we always encourage students to study Arithmetic Progressions in one sequence: first understand what an AP is, then learn common difference, then nth term, and finally move to sum of n terms and board-style questions. This makes the chapter much easier to revise and remember.

Why Arithmetic Progressions Is Important in Class 10

Arithmetic Progressions is an important algebra chapter and regularly contributes to board-exam marks.

Why Students Should Prepare This Chapter Well

  • it is a regular board-exam chapter
  • it includes direct formula-based questions
  • it includes MCQs, short answers, and long answers
  • it helps students improve sequence-based reasoning
  • it includes both concept-based and application-based questions

Chapter Overview at a Glance

This quick table helps students revise the full chapter faster.

Quick Concept Table

TopicKey idea
Arithmetic Progression (AP)A sequence in which the difference between consecutive terms remains constant
First termThe starting term of the AP
Common differenceThe fixed difference between two consecutive terms
nth termThe term at the nth position
Sum of n termsThe total of the first n terms
Arithmetic meanThe middle term between two terms in AP

What Is an Arithmetic Progression

An arithmetic progression, or AP, is a sequence of numbers in which the difference between any two consecutive terms is the same.

Simple Meaning

If the gap between one term and the next term remains constant throughout the sequence, then the sequence is called an arithmetic progression.

Examples of AP

SequenceCommon difference
2, 4, 6, 8, …2
100, 70, 40, 10, …-30
5, 5, 5, 5, …0

Important Note

The common difference can be:

  • positive
  • negative
  • zero

As long as it remains constant, the sequence is an AP.

Terms of an AP

In an arithmetic progression, each number is called a term.

Naming the Terms

PositionNotation
First terma₁
Second terma₂
Third terma₃
Fourth terma₄
nth termaₙ

Common Difference

The constant difference between two consecutive terms of an AP is called the common difference.

Symbol of Common Difference

The common difference is denoted by d.

Formula for Common Difference

d = a₂ – a₁

It can also be written as:

  • d = a₃ – a₂
  • d = a₄ – a₃

Easy Rule

Always subtract the preceding term from the succeeding term.

Solved Example 1: Find the Common Difference

Find the common difference of:

10, 15, 20, 25, …

Given

Sequence:

10, 15, 20, 25, …

Solution

d = 15 – 10 = 5

Answer

The common difference is 5.

Solved Example 2: Negative Common Difference

Find the common difference of:

-3, -6, -9, -12, …

Given

Sequence:

-3, -6, -9, -12, …

Solution

d = -6 – (-3)

d = -6 + 3 = -3

Answer

The common difference is -3.

Arithmetic Mean

If three numbers a, b, and c are in AP, then the middle term is called the arithmetic mean of the first and third terms.

Important Relation

If a, b, c are in AP, then:

b – a = c – b

So:

2b = a + c

This is a very important result used in many board questions.

Arithmetic Mean Summary Table

If three terms are in APImportant result
a, b, c2b = a + c

General Form of an AP

If a₁ is the first term and d is the common difference, then the AP can be written as:

a₁, a₁ + d, a₁ + 2d, a₁ + 3d, …

This is the general form of an arithmetic progression.

nth Term of an AP

The nth term of an AP is one of the most important formulas of the chapter.

Formula for nth Term

aₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d

This formula helps students find any term directly without writing all the terms.

Why This Formula Matters

Using this formula, students can find:

  • the 10th term
  • the 20th term
  • the nth term
  • the position of a given term

all without expanding the full sequence.

Solved Example 3: Find the 10th Term

Find the 10th term of the AP:

3, 8, 13, 18, …

Given

  • a₁ = 3
  • d = 5
  • n = 10

Step 1

Use the formula:

aₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d

Step 2

Substitute the values:

a₁₀ = 3 + (10 – 1) × 5

Step 3

Simplify:

a₁₀ = 3 + 45 = 48

Answer

The 10th term is 48.

Solved Example 4: Find the Value of n

Which term of the AP 1, 5, 9, 13, … is 129?

Given

  • a₁ = 1
  • d = 4
  • aₙ = 129

Step 1

Use the nth term formula:

aₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d

Step 2

Substitute the values:

129 = 1 + (n – 1)4

Step 3

Simplify:

128 = 4(n – 1)

32 = n – 1

n = 33

Answer

129 is the 33rd term.

nth Term from the End

Sometimes students are asked to find the nth term from the last.

Formula

nth term from the end = l – (n – 1)d

Where:

  • l = last term
  • d = common difference
  • n = position from the end

This formula is useful when the last term is known.

Important AP Shortcuts for 3, 4, and 5 Terms

These shortcuts are very useful in board questions.

Three Terms in AP

If three terms are in AP, they can be taken as:

a – d, a, a + d

Why This Is Useful

Their sum becomes:

(a – d) + a + (a + d) = 3a

So the d terms cancel.

Four Terms in AP

If four terms are in AP, they can be taken as:

a – 3d, a – d, a + d, a + 3d

This is a useful symmetric form in algebraic questions.

Five Terms in AP

If five terms are in AP, they can be taken as:

a – 2d, a – d, a, a + d, a + 2d

Why This Is Very Useful

Their sum becomes:

(a – 2d) + (a – d) + a + (a + d) + (a + 2d) = 5a

So the d terms cancel completely.

Shortcut Form Summary Table

Number of termsStandard AP form
3 termsa – d, a, a + d
4 termsa – 3d, a – d, a + d, a + 3d
5 termsa – 2d, a – d, a, a + d, a + 2d

Solved Example 5: Three Terms in AP

If the sum of three numbers in AP is 30, find the middle term.

Given

Sum of three terms = 30

Step 1

Let the three terms be:

a – d, a, a + d

Step 2

Add them:

(a – d) + a + (a + d) = 30

Step 3

Simplify:

3a = 30

a = 10

Answer

The middle term is 10.

Solved Example 6: Five Terms in AP

The sum of five numbers in AP is 40. Find the middle term.

Given

Sum of five terms = 40

Step 1

Let the terms be:

a – 2d, a – d, a, a + d, a + 2d

Step 2

Add them:

5a = 40

Step 3

Simplify:

a = 8

Answer

The middle term is 8.

Sum of the First n Terms of an AP

This is the second major formula section of the chapter.

Formula Using First and Last Term

Sₙ = n/2 (a₁ + l)

Where:

  • Sₙ = sum of first n terms
  • a₁ = first term
  • l = last term

Formula Using First Term and Common Difference

Sₙ = n/2 [2a₁ + (n – 1)d]

This is the most commonly used formula in Class 10.

When to Use Which Formula

SituationFormula to use
First term, common difference, and n are knownSₙ = n/2 [2a₁ + (n – 1)d]
First term, last term, and n are knownSₙ = n/2 (a₁ + l)

Why the Sum Formula Is Important

It helps students find:

  • the sum of first 10 terms
  • the sum of first 20 terms
  • the total saving, earning, or quantity after several steps
  • application-based answers in word problems

Solved Example 7: Find the Sum of the First 20 Terms

Find the sum of the first 20 terms of the AP:

3, 7, 11, 15, …

Given

  • a₁ = 3
  • d = 4
  • n = 20

Step 1

Use the formula:

Sₙ = n/2 [2a₁ + (n – 1)d]

Step 2

Substitute the values:

S₂₀ = 20/2 [2 × 3 + (20 – 1)4]

Step 3

Simplify:

S₂₀ = 10 [6 + 76]

S₂₀ = 10 × 82

S₂₀ = 820

Answer

The sum of the first 20 terms is 820.

Solved Example 8: Saving Money in AP

A student saves 32 rupees in the first month, 36 rupees in the second month, and 40 rupees in the third month. In how many months will the total saving become 2000 rupees?

Given

  • a₁ = 32
  • d = 4
  • Sₙ = 2000

Step 1

Use the sum formula:

Sₙ = n/2 [2a₁ + (n – 1)d]

Step 2

Substitute the values:

2000 = n/2 [2 × 32 + (n – 1)4]

Step 3

Simplify:

2000 = n/2 [64 + 4n – 4]

2000 = n/2 (60 + 4n)

2000 = n(30 + 2n)

Step 4

Form the quadratic equation:

2n² + 30n – 2000 = 0

Divide by 2:

n² + 15n – 1000 = 0

Step 5

Factorise:

n² + 40n – 25n – 1000 = 0

n(n + 40) – 25(n + 40) = 0

(n – 25)(n + 40) = 0

Step 6

Take the valid value:

n = 25

Answer

The total saving becomes 2000 rupees in 25 months.

Important Question Types from Arithmetic Progressions

Board exams usually ask repeated question styles from this chapter.

Case 1: Find the Common Difference

These are direct and scoring.

Case 2: Check Whether a Sequence Is an AP

Students compare consecutive differences.

Case 3: Find the nth Term

These are very common.

Case 4: Find Which Term Has a Given Value

These are based on aₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d.

Case 5: Find the Sum of First n Terms

These are based on Sₙ formulas.

Case 6: 3-Term, 4-Term, or 5-Term AP Questions

These use symmetric term shortcuts.

Case 7: Word Problems

These are based on savings, earnings, or pattern-based situations.

Case 8: Case-Based Questions

These combine formulas with interpretation.

Question Type Summary Table

CaseFocus area
Case 1Common difference calculation
Case 2Constant difference check
Case 3Direct use of nth term formula
Case 4Position-finding using aₙ
Case 5Sum formula application
Case 6Shortcut forms for AP terms
Case 7Equation formation from situations
Case 8Interpretation and application

Common Mistakes Students Make in Arithmetic Progressions

Common Mistakes Table

MistakeCorrect idea
Subtracting in the wrong orderAlways do succeeding term minus preceding term
Confusing aₙ and Sₙaₙ is a term, while Sₙ is the sum of terms
Using a₁ + nd instead of a₁ + (n – 1)dThe nth term formula is aₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d
Forgetting to reject impossible valuesWord problems may not allow negative answers
Mixing up last term and nth termRead carefully whether the question asks for l, aₙ, or Sₙ

Quick Revision Sheet for Arithmetic Progressions

This section is useful before board exams.

Quick Revision Table

TopicFormula or idea
Common differenced = a₂ – a₁
nth termaₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d
Sum of n termsSₙ = n/2 [2a₁ + (n – 1)d]
Sum using last termSₙ = n/2 (a₁ + l)
Three terms in APa – d, a, a + d
Five terms in APa – 2d, a – d, a, a + d, a + 2d
Arithmetic mean condition2b = a + c

Best Study Strategy for Arithmetic Progressions

Arithmetic Progressions becomes much easier when revised in a fixed order.

Step-by-Step Revision Table

StepWhat to do
Step 1Understand AP through the idea of constant difference
Step 2Memorise the core formulas
Step 3Practise 3-term and 5-term shortcuts
Step 4Solve pattern-based word problems
Step 5Revise formula and concept together

Practice Questions

This section helps students revise through standard board-style questions.

Important Practice Questions

  1. Find the common difference of the AP:

7, 11, 15, 19, …

  1. Find the 12th term of the AP:

5, 9, 13, 17, …

  1. Which term of the AP 3, 8, 13, 18, … is 98?
  2. The sum of three numbers in AP is 24. Find the middle term.
  3. The sum of five numbers in AP is 55. Find the middle term.
  4. Find the sum of the first 15 terms of the AP:

2, 5, 8, 11, …

  1. A student saves 50 rupees in the first month, 60 in the second, 70 in the third, and so on. In how many months will the total saving become 2750 rupees?

FAQs

Q1. What is an arithmetic progression in Class 10 Maths?

An arithmetic progression is a sequence of numbers in which the difference between consecutive terms is always the same.

Q2. What is the common difference in an AP?

The common difference is the constant difference between consecutive terms and is written as d.

Q3. What is the formula for the nth term of an AP?

The formula is aₙ = a₁ + (n – 1)d.

Q4. What is the formula for the sum of n terms of an AP?

The formula is Sₙ = n/2 [2a₁ + (n – 1)d].

Q5. What are three terms in AP usually taken as?

They are usually taken as a – d, a, and a + d.

Q6. What are five terms in AP usually taken as?

They are usually taken as a – 2d, a – d, a, a + d, and a + 2d.

Q7. What is arithmetic mean in AP?

If a, b, c are in AP, then b is called the arithmetic mean of a and c.

Q8. How can I score well in Arithmetic Progressions?

You can score well by understanding the meaning of AP, memorising the formulas, practising 3-term and 5-term shortcuts, and solving sum-based questions regularly.

Conclusion

Arithmetic Progressions is one of the most direct and scoring chapters in Class 10 Maths because it is built on a simple idea: constant difference. Once students understand that one concept properly, the formulas for nth term and sum of n terms become much easier to use.

The best way to prepare this chapter is to revise the formulas with meaning, practise shortcut forms like 3-term and 5-term AP, and solve a variety of board-style questions. At Deeksha Vedantu, we always remind students that AP becomes easy when the pattern is understood clearly and the formulas are applied step by step.

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