NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Maths Chapter 5: Linear Inequalities (2026–27)
These Class 11 Maths Chapter 5 solutions cover Linear Inequalities from the NCERT textbook (Reprint 2026–27). Every question of Exercise 5.1 and the Miscellaneous Exercise on Chapter 5 is solved step by step — algebraic solutions of inequalities in one variable, simultaneous systems, number-line representation and real-life word problems — with each answer checked against the book’s answer key.
Chapter 5 Overview
Chapter 5, Linear Inequalities, extends the idea of an equation to statements that use the signs <, >, ≤ and ≥. Many real situations — a budget, a minimum average, a temperature range — cannot be written as an equation, but they fit naturally as inequalities. The chapter teaches you to solve linear inequalities in one variable algebraically (over the integers and over the real numbers), to show their solution sets on a number line, to solve double inequalities and systems of two inequalities, and to model word problems on marks, mixtures, temperature scales and IQ. The Class 11 Maths Chapter 5 solutions below work through every question of Exercise 5.1 and the Miscellaneous Exercise.
Key Concepts & Definitions
Inequality: two real numbers or two algebraic expressions related by <, >, ≤ or ≥ form an inequality, e.g. 30x < 200 or 40x + 20y ≤ 120.
Strict vs slack: < and > give strict inequalities; ≤ and ≥ give slack inequalities (equality is allowed).
Linear inequality in one variable: of the form ax + b < 0 (or >, ≤, ≥) with a ≠ 0.
Solution / solution set: a value of the variable that makes the inequality true is a solution; the set of all such values is the solution set. The solution set depends on the universal set (natural numbers, integers or real numbers).
Double inequality: a statement such as −8 ≤ 5x − 3 < 7, solved by working on both parts together.
Interval notation: ( ) for endpoints not included (strict), [ ] for endpoints included (slack); e.g. x < 2 is (−∞, 2) and x ≥ 8 is [8, ∞).
Important Rules & Formulas (Chapter 5)
Rule 1 (add / subtract): equal numbers may be added to (or subtracted from) both sides of an inequality without changing the sign of inequality.
Rule 2 (multiply / divide): both sides may be multiplied or divided by the same positive number without change; but on multiplying or dividing by a negative number the sign of inequality is reversed (< ↔ >, ≤ ↔ ≥).
Number line: for x < a (or x > a) put an open circle at a and shade to the left (or right); for x ≤ a (or x ≥ a) put a filled circle at a and shade to the left (or right).
System of inequalities: solve each inequality separately, then take the intersection of the solution sets (the values common to all).
Temperature: C = (5/9)(F − 32), equivalently F = (9/5)C + 32.
Exercise 5.1 Solutions
Questions are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook; the worked solutions are original and verified against the answers given at the back of the book.
1. Solve 24x < 100, when (i) x is a natural number. (ii) x is an integer.
2. Solve −12x > 30, when (i) x is a natural number. (ii) x is an integer.
3. Solve 5x − 3 < 7, when (i) x is an integer. (ii) x is a real number.
4. Solve 3x + 8 > 2, when (i) x is an integer. (ii) x is a real number.
Solve the inequalities in Exercises 5 to 16 for real x.
5. 4x + 3 < 5x + 7
6. 3x − 7 > 5x − 1
7. 3(x − 1) ≤ 2(x − 3)
8. 3(2 − x) ≥ 2(1 − x)
9. x + x/2 + x/3 < 11
10. x/3 > x/2 + 1
11. 3(x − 2)/5 ≤ 5(2 − x)/3
12. (1/2)(3x/5 + 4) ≥ (1/3)(x − 6)
13. 2(2x + 3) − 10 < 6(x − 2)
14. 37 − (3x + 5) > 9x − 8(x − 3)
15. x/4 < (5x − 2)/3 − (7x − 3)/5
16. (2x − 1)/3 ≥ (3x − 2)/4 − (2 − x)/5
Solve the inequalities in Exercises 17 to 20 and show the graph of the solution in each case on number line.
17. 3x − 2 < 2x + 1
18. 5x − 3 > 3x − 5
19. 3(1 − x) < 2(x + 4)
20. x/2 ≥ (5x − 2)/3 − (7x − 3)/5
21. Ravi obtained 70 and 75 marks in first two unit test. Find the minimum marks he should get in the third test to have an average of at least 60 marks.
22. To receive Grade ‘A’ in a course, one must obtain an average of 90 marks or more in five examinations (each of 100 marks). If Sunita’s marks in first four examinations are 87, 92, 94 and 95, find minimum marks that Sunita must obtain in fifth examination to get grade ‘A’ in the course.
23. Find all pairs of consecutive odd positive integers both of which are smaller than 10 such that their sum is more than 11.
24. Find all pairs of consecutive even positive integers, both of which are larger than 5 such that their sum is less than 23.
25. The longest side of a triangle is 3 times the shortest side and the third side is 2 cm shorter than the longest side. If the perimeter of the triangle is at least 61 cm, find the minimum length of the shortest side.
26. A man wants to cut three lengths from a single piece of board of length 91 cm. The second length is to be 3 cm longer than the shortest and the third length is to be twice as long as the shortest. What are the possible lengths of the shortest board if the third piece is to be at least 5 cm longer than the second? [Hint: If x is the length of the shortest board, then x, (x + 3) and 2x are the lengths of the second and third piece, respectively. Thus, x + (x + 3) + 2x ≤ 91 and 2x ≥ (x + 3) + 5].
Miscellaneous Exercise on Chapter 5 — Solutions
Solve the inequalities in Exercises 1 to 6.
1. 2 ≤ 3x − 4 ≤ 5
2. 6 ≤ −3(2x − 4) < 12
3. −3 ≤ 4 − 7x/2 ≤ 18
4. −15 < 3(x − 2)/5 ≤ 0
5. −12 < 4 − 3x/(−5) ≤ 2
6. 7 ≤ (3x + 11)/2 ≤ 11
Solve the inequalities in Exercises 7 to 10 and represent the solution graphically on number line.
7. 5x + 1 > −24, 5x − 1 < 24
8. 2(x − 1) < x + 5, 3(x + 2) > 2 − x
9. 3x − 7 > 2(x − 6), 6 − x > 11 − 2x
10. 5(2x − 7) − 3(2x + 3) ≤ 0, 2x + 19 ≤ 6x + 47
11. A solution is to be kept between 68° F and 77° F. What is the range in temperature in degree Celsius (C) if the Celsius / Fahrenheit (F) conversion formula is given by F = (9/5)C + 32?
12. A solution of 8% boric acid is to be diluted by adding a 2% boric acid solution to it. The resulting mixture is to be more than 4% but less than 6% boric acid. If we have 640 litres of the 8% solution, how many litres of the 2% solution will have to be added?
13. How many litres of water will have to be added to 1125 litres of the 45% solution of acid so that the resulting mixture will contain more than 25% but less than 30% acid content?
14. IQ of a person is given by the formula IQ = (MA/CA) × 100, where MA is mental age and CA is chronological age. If 80 ≤ IQ ≤ 140 for a group of 12 years old children, find the range of their mental age.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Watch out for these
- Forgetting to reverse the inequality sign when you multiply or divide both sides by a negative number (e.g. in −12x > 30 or in dividing a double inequality by −3).
- Confusing the universal set: over natural numbers a solution set can be empty, over integers it is a list, over real numbers it is an interval — read the question.
- Using ( ) instead of [ ] in interval notation; use [ ] for ≤ / ≥ (endpoint included) and ( ) for < / > (endpoint excluded).
- On a number line, drawing a filled circle for a strict inequality — strict (<, >) needs an open circle.
- In a system of inequalities, giving the union instead of the intersection — only values that satisfy all inequalities are solutions.
- In word problems, mistranslating “at least” (≥), “at most” (≤), “more than” (>) and “less than” (<).
Practice MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The solution of 5x − 3 < 7 for real x is:
(a) (−∞, 2) (b) (2, ∞) (c) (−∞, 2] (d) [2, ∞)
2. When both sides of an inequality are multiplied by a negative number, the inequality sign:
(a) stays the same (b) becomes equality (c) is reversed (d) disappears
3. The solution set of −12x > 30 when x is a natural number is:
(a) {1, 2} (b) empty set (c) {−3, −4, …} (d) (−∞, −2.5)
4. The solution of 4x + 3 < 5x + 7 is:
(a) (−∞, −4) (b) (−4, ∞) (c) [−4, ∞) (d) (4, ∞)
5. On a number line, x ≤ 3 is shown by:
(a) open circle at 3, shade right (b) filled circle at 3, shade left (c) open circle at 3, shade left (d) filled circle at 3, shade right
6. The solution of the double inequality 2 ≤ 3x − 4 ≤ 5 is:
(a) [2, 3] (b) (2, 3) (c) [−2, 3] (d) [2, 5]
7. The interval (−∞, 6) corresponds to the inequality:
(a) x ≤ 6 (b) x > 6 (c) x < 6 (d) x ≥ 6
8. The minimum marks Ravi needs in the third test for an average of at least 60 (after 70 and 75) is:
(a) 30 (b) 35 (c) 40 (d) 45
9. The solution common to 5x + 1 > −24 and 5x − 1 < 24 is:
(a) (−5, 5) (b) [−5, 5] (c) (−∞, 5) (d) (−5, ∞)
10. For a 12-year-old child with 80 ≤ IQ ≤ 140, the range of mental age (MA) is:
(a) 8 ≤ MA ≤ 14 (b) 9.6 ≤ MA ≤ 16.8 (c) 10 ≤ MA ≤ 15 (d) 9.6 ≤ MA ≤ 14
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both Assertion and Reason are true and the Reason is the correct explanation of the Assertion; (B) Both are true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion is true but Reason is false; (D) Assertion is false but Reason is true.
A-R 1. Assertion: Solving −12x > 30 gives x < −2.5.
Reason: Dividing both sides of an inequality by a negative number reverses the sign of the inequality.
A-R 2. Assertion: The inequality −12x > 30 has no solution when x is a natural number.
Reason: No natural number is less than −2.5.
A-R 3. Assertion: The solution of 3x − 2 < 2x + 1 is the closed interval [3, ∞).
Reason: A strict inequality (<) excludes its endpoint, so the solution is x < 3, i.e. (−∞, 3).
A-R 4. Assertion: The solution of the system 5x + 1 > −24 and 5x − 1 < 24 is (−5, 5).
Reason: The solution of a system of inequalities is the intersection of the individual solution sets.
A-R 5. Assertion: To keep a solution between 68°F and 77°F, the Celsius temperature must lie between 20°C and 25°C.
Reason: The conversion formula F = (9/5)C + 32 lets the Fahrenheit range be rewritten as a Celsius range.
Quick Revision Summary
- An inequality relates two expressions by <, >, ≤ or ≥; <, > are strict and ≤, ≥ are slack.
- Add or subtract equal numbers on both sides freely; multiply/divide by a positive number freely, but reverse the sign for a negative number.
- The solution set depends on the universal set: natural numbers, integers, or real numbers (an interval).
- Number line: open circle for strict (<, >), filled circle for slack (≤, ≥); shade left for </≤ and right for >/≥.
- A double inequality is solved by operating on all three parts at once.
- A system of inequalities is solved by taking the intersection of the separate solution sets.
- Word problems use “at least” (≥), “at most” (≤), “more than” (>), “less than” (<).
How to score full marks in this chapter
Always write the rule you are using when you flip a sign — mark a small note “dividing by a negative” so the examiner sees the reversal is intentional. Clear fractions early by multiplying by the LCM, keep the variable on one side, and state the final answer in interval notation. For graph questions, draw the number line, mark the boundary with an open or filled circle as appropriate, and shade the correct side. In word problems, define your variable in one line, translate the phrase into an inequality, then solve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 11 Maths Chapter 5 about?
Chapter 5, Linear Inequalities, deals with statements joined by <, >, ≤ or ≥. You learn to solve linear inequalities in one variable over natural numbers, integers and real numbers, represent solutions on a number line, solve double inequalities and systems of two inequalities, and apply them to word problems on marks, mixtures, temperature and IQ.
How many exercises are there in Class 11 Maths Chapter 5?
There is one numbered exercise, Exercise 5.1 (26 questions), and a Miscellaneous Exercise on Chapter 5 (14 questions). All of them are solved step by step on this page.
When does the inequality sign get reversed?
The sign reverses only when you multiply or divide both sides of an inequality by a negative number (< becomes >, ≤ becomes ≥, and so on). Adding, subtracting, or multiplying/dividing by a positive number never changes the sign.
Are these Class 11 Maths Chapter 5 solutions free?
Yes. All solutions are free and follow the official NCERT Class 11 Mathematics textbook for the 2026–27 session, with each answer verified against the book’s answer key.
