A single added constant means one inverse move: subtract the same constant from both sides.
Subtract 3 from both sides
Before
After
Answer
Interval
Set notation
Solve any one-step inequality instantly — get step-by-step solutions, number line graphs, and interval notation. Free, no sign-up required.
Why this page is built for one-step intent
One-Step Solver
Built for one-step inequalities: a single addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division operation isolates the variable, with sign-flip detection and number line output.
Supported Input Styles
x+3>7 subtracts 3 from both sides — one step, symbol unchanged.x-5<=2 adds 5 to both sides — one step, symbol unchanged.3x>=12 divides both sides by 3 — positive divisor, symbol unchanged.x/4<3 multiplies both sides by 4 — positive multiplier, symbol unchanged.-2x>8 divides both sides by -2 — negative divisor, symbol flips to <.Math Keyboard
Tap symbols, numbers, or actions for fast linear-inequality input.
Result
The one-step solution isolates x > 4.
Step 1
Step 1 — Apply the inverse operation
Identify the operation applied to x and reverse it on both sides. Subtraction reverses addition. Division reverses multiplication. When the operation involves a negative number, the inequality symbol flips.
Before
x + 3 > 7
After
x > 4
Recent History
Saved locally in this browser so you can revisit recent one-step inequalities and compare how each inverse operation behaved.
Calculator Types
Solve one-variable linear inequalities with steps, interval notation, and a clean number-line graph.
Solve one-step inequalities with sign-flip detection, number line graph, and interval notation.
Solve two-step inequalities with the sign-flip rule, number line, and interval notation.
Solve multi-step inequalities with distribution, combining like terms, variable collection, and sign-flip detection.
Solve quadratic inequalities with sign analysis, roots, interval notation, and a number-line graph.
Solve absolute value inequalities with case splitting, interval notation, and step-by-step explanations.
Solve compound inequalities with interval intersection, union logic, and graph output.
Solve rational inequalities with steps, excluded values, sign charts, and interval notation.
Zone 4
The fastest way to use this calculator is to type the inequality exactly as it appears — x + 3 > 7, x - 5 <= 2, 3x >= 12, or -2x > 8. The parser identifies the single operation applied to x and applies the inverse operation to both sides automatically.
After you enter a problem, the Steps tab shows the one move that isolates the variable: subtract, add, divide, or multiply. For addition and subtraction problems, the symbol always stays the same. For multiplication and division problems, the symbol stays the same when the number is positive and flips when the number is negative. The calculator labels the flip explicitly when it happens so the rule is visible rather than just implied by the answer.
If you are new to inequalities, use the Graph tab after the Steps tab. Seeing the result — for example x > 4 — as a shaded ray on a number line makes the solution set concrete. The open or closed circle at the boundary shows whether the boundary value itself is part of the answer.
When the algebra grows beyond one move, step up to the two-step inequality calculator, the multi-step inequality calculator, or the linear inequality calculator for broader first-degree practice.
Enter a one-step inequality such as x + 3 > 7 or -2x > 8.
Review the single step card to see which operation was applied and whether the symbol stayed the same or flipped.
Open the graph, interval notation, and verify tabs to confirm the answer.
A one-step inequality is an inequality that requires exactly one operation to isolate the variable. The operation is either addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division. Examples include x + 3 > 7 (subtract 3), x - 5 <= 2 (add 5), 3x >= 12 (divide by 3), and x/4 < 3 (multiply by 4).
One-step inequalities are the first inequality type students encounter in middle school because they are the simplest extension of one-step equations. The algebra is nearly identical — apply the inverse operation to both sides — with one new rule: if the operation involves multiplying or dividing by a negative number, the inequality symbol reverses direction.
That sign-flip rule is the only thing that makes one-step inequalities different from one-step equations. For x + 3 > 7, subtracting 3 gives x > 4, just as it would in an equation. But for -2x > 8, dividing by -2 gives x < -4, not x > -4. The symbol flips because the direction of the inequality reverses when both sides are scaled by a negative factor.
For the graph-first version of the same idea, review inequalities on a number line.
| Comparison point | One-step equation | One-step inequality |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Find the exact value that makes both sides equal. | Find every value that keeps the comparison true. |
| Operations | Add, subtract, multiply, or divide. | Same four operations. |
| Sign flip rule | No flip — equality is symmetric. | Flip when multiplying or dividing by a negative. |
| Answer type | A single value: x = 4. | A ray: x > 4 or x <= -3. |
| Graph | One point on a number line. | A shaded ray with an open or closed endpoint. |
One-step inequalities require one inverse operation. The only decision beyond choosing the right operation is whether the symbol stays the same or flips — and that depends entirely on whether the number you are multiplying or dividing by is positive or negative. For a broader rule overview, see how to solve inequalities.
If the inequality has x + a or x - a, apply the inverse operation to both sides. The symbol never flips for addition or subtraction, regardless of whether a is positive or negative.
Example
If the inequality has ax or x/a where a is positive, divide or multiply both sides by a. The symbol stays the same.
Example
If the inequality has ax or x/a where a is negative, divide or multiply both sides by a and flip the symbol. This is the one rule that has no equivalent in equation solving.
Example
Adding or subtracting never reverses the inequality. Many early mistakes come from treating subtraction as if it were division.
In -2x > 8, the negative belongs to the coefficient. If you divide by -2 but forget the sign, the final direction of the solution will be wrong.
Strict inequalities use an open circle. Inclusive inequalities use a closed circle. The graph should match the final symbol exactly.
These examples cover the core one-step branches: addition, subtraction, a positive coefficient, and the negative sign-flip case.
A single added constant means one inverse move: subtract the same constant from both sides.
Subtract 3 from both sides
Before
After
Answer
Interval
Set notation
A subtracted constant is undone by adding the same value to both sides, with the symbol unchanged.
Add 5 to both sides
Before
After
Answer
Interval
Set notation
A positive coefficient is removed by division, and the inequality keeps the same direction.
Divide both sides by 3
Before
After
Answer
Interval
Set notation
Dividing by a negative number isolates x, but it also reverses the inequality symbol.
Divide by -2 and flip the sign
Before
After
Answer
Interval
Set notation
A one-step inequality always ends as a single ray after the inverse operation is applied. The algebra is short, so the graph is often the fastest way to check whether the sign direction stayed correct.
Use an open endpoint for strict symbols (< or >) and a closed endpoint for inclusive symbols (<= or >=). If you want a broader visual refresher on inequalities on a number line, compare the same answer pattern there after solving.
Strict inequality
Inclusive inequality
Interval notation is the compact way to write the ray that comes out of a one-step inequality. Parentheses exclude a boundary, brackets include it, and infinity always uses a parenthesis.
Because the algebra is only one move long, interval notation is a good self-check. If the interval direction does not match the graph, revisit whether the final multiplication or division should have flipped the symbol.
The full interval notation guide explains the bracket and parenthesis rules in more detail.
| Inequality | Interval notation | Number line | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Values greater than a, but not including a. | |||
| Values greater than a, including a. | |||
| Values less than a, but not including a. | |||
| Values less than a, including a. |
It requires exactly one operation to isolate the variable — a single addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division.
Only when you multiply or divide both sides by a negative number. Adding or subtracting any number — positive or negative — never flips the symbol.
No. Subtracting a negative number is the same as adding a positive number. The sign flip rule applies only to multiplication and division by a negative number.
A one-step inequality always produces a single ray — a shaded line extending left or right from one boundary point. The boundary is marked with an open circle (strict symbol) or a closed circle (inclusive symbol).
A one-step inequality needs exactly one operation. A two-step inequality needs two — typically one addition or subtraction followed by one multiplication or division.
Yes. Enter -2x > 8 or -x/3 <= 5 and the calculator will apply the sign-flip rule automatically and label the step where it happens.
Zone 6
Keep the same early-algebra rules nearby while you practice inverse operations, sign flips, and final interval checks.