Percentage change
Increase or decrease relative to an original value.
Change (%) = ((New − Original) / Original) × 100 Edexcel International A Level WMA01/WMA02/WMA03
Pure maths, mechanics and statistics formulas aligned to the Edexcel International A Level syllabus — summarised for Paper 1–4 preparation.
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Aligned with the latest 2026 syllabus and board specifications. This sheet is prepared to match your exam board’s official specifications for the 2026 exam series.
Whether you are sitting the AS or full A Level, this formula sheet organises differentiation, integration, series, vectors, kinematics and probability formulas with short reminders to help you avoid common mistakes.
Pure maths identities with exam-ready notes
Mechanics equations with vector form reminders
Statistics formulas for discrete and continuous models
Tips to pair formulas with Edexcel command words
Percentages, growth, standard measures, and proportional reasoning used across GCSE papers.
Increase or decrease relative to an original value.
Change (%) = ((New − Original) / Original) × 100 P principal, R annual % rate, T years.
Interest = (P × R × T) / 100 P principal, r decimal rate per period, n periods per year, t years.
A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt) Equivalent ratios and cross-multiplication.
a : b = c : d ⟺ a/b = c/d ⟹ ad = bc Consistent units (e.g. m/s, km/h).
speed = distance / time distance = speed × time Mass m, volume V.
density = mass / volume F force, A area.
pressure = force / area y proportional to x.
y = kx (k constant) y inversely proportional to x.
y = k/x or xy = k Topic Focus
Exam tips
Linear and quadratic relationships, coordinate facts, and common sequence formulae.
m gradient, c y-intercept.
y = mx + c Points (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂).
m = (y₂ − y₁) / (x₂ − x₁) Gradients m₁ and m₂ (neither vertical/horizontal mismatch).
m₁ × m₂ = −1 Between (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂).
((x₁ + x₂)/2 , (y₁ + y₂)/2) In the coordinate plane.
d = √[(x₂ − x₁)² + (y₂ − y₁)²] Roots of ax² + bx + c = 0, a ≠ 0.
x = [−b ± √(b² − 4ac)] / (2a) Factorising.
a² − b² = (a − b)(a + b) First term a, common difference d.
uₙ = a + (n − 1)d Last term l optional.
Sₙ = n/2 [2a + (n − 1)d] Sₙ = n/2 (a + l) First term a, common ratio r.
uₙ = arⁿ⁻¹ r ≠ 1.
Sₙ = a(1 − rⁿ) / (1 − r) Centre (a, b), radius r.
(x − a)² + (y − b)² = r² Topic Focus
Graph & algebra
Plane shapes, compound figures, and circle measures.
Length l, width w.
Area = lw Perimeter = 2l + 2w Base b, perpendicular height h.
Area = ½ × b × h Base b, perpendicular height h.
Area = b × h Parallel sides a and b, perpendicular height h.
Area = ½ (a + b) × h Radius r, diameter d = 2r.
Area = πr² Circumference = 2πr = πd Angle θ° at centre.
Arc = (θ/360) × 2πr Angle θ° at centre.
Sector area = (θ/360) × πr² Topic Focus
Mensuration
Prisms, cylinders, cones, spheres, and pyramids.
Cross-sectional area A, length l.
Volume = A × l Radius r, height h.
Volume
V = πr²h Curved surface area
2πrh Radius r, height h, slant height l.
Volume
V = ⅓ πr²h Curved surface area
πrl Link
l² = r² + h² (Pythagoras) Radius r.
Volume
V = (4/3)πr³ Surface area
A = 4πr² Base area A, perpendicular height h.
V = ⅓ × A × h Right-angled triangle, hypotenuse c.
a² + b² = c² Topic Focus
3D problems
Right-angled triangles, sine/cosine rules, and triangle area.
Angle θ opposite, adjacent, hypotenuse.
sin θ = opposite / hypotenuse cos θ = adjacent / hypotenuse tan θ = opposite / adjacent Any triangle with sides a, b, c opposite angles A, B, C.
a / sin A = b / sin B = c / sin C Finding a side or an angle.
a² = b² + c² − 2bc cos A cos A = (b² + c² − a²) / (2bc) Sides b, c and included angle A.
Area = ½ bc sin A Topic Focus
Choosing a method
Summaries of data, probability rules, and expectation.
Arithmetic average.
mean = (sum of values) / (number of values) Midpoints mᵢ, frequencies fᵢ.
≈ Σ(mᵢ × fᵢ) / Σfᵢ Spread of data.
range = largest value − smallest value Median: middle value when ordered; mode: most frequent.
If there is an even count of values, median is the mean of the two middle values.
Equally likely outcomes.
P(A) = (number of outcomes for A) / (total possible outcomes) Probability of not A.
P(not A) = 1 − P(A) A and B independent.
P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B) Trials n, probability p of success.
expected frequency ≈ n × p Topic Focus
Data & chance
suvat relationships used in GCSE Mathematics and linked contexts; u initial velocity, v final, a acceleration, s displacement, t time.
Straight-line motion with constant acceleration.
v = u + at s = ½(u + v)t s = ut + ½at² v² = u² + 2as Topic Focus
Using suvat
Gradients, tangents, and optimisation.
f′(x) = lim_{h→0} (f(x+h) − f(x)) / h d/dx (x^n) = n x^{n−1} d/dx (e^x) = e^x d/dx (ln x) = 1/x d/dx (sin x) = cos x d/dx (cos x) = −sin x dy/dx = dy/du × du/dx d/dx (u v) = u′ v + u v′ d/dx (u/v) = (u′ v − u v′) / v² Solve f′(x) = 0; classify with f″(x) or sign change Topic Focus
Modelling
Antiderivatives, definite integrals, and area.
∫ f(x) dx = F(x) + C where F′ = f ∫_a^b f(x) dx = F(b) − F(a) Area = ∫_a^b y dx (y ≥ 0) ∫_a^b (f − g) dx where f ≥ g ∫ u dv = u v − ∫ v du ∫ f(u(x)) u′(x) dx = ∫ f(u) du Topic Focus
Interpretation
Pythagorean type identities and equations.
sin² θ + cos² θ = 1 1 + tan² θ = sec² θ sin(A ± B) = sin A cos B ± cos A sin B cos(A ± B) = cos A cos B ∓ sin A sin B sin 2θ = 2 sin θ cos θ cos 2θ = cos² θ − sin² θ a sin x ± b cos x.
R sin(x ± α) or R cos(x ± α) Topic Focus
Solving
Scalar product, equations of lines.
|a| = √(a₁² + a₂² + a₃²) a · b = |a| |b| cos θ = a₁b₁ + a₂b₂ + a₃b₃ cos θ = (a · b) / (|a| |b|) r = a + λ d Use perpendicular vector.
Projection and cross product methods per specification Topic Focus
Geometry
Discrete and continuous models.
P(A|B) = P(A ∩ B) / P(B) n trials, p success probability.
P(X = r) = C(n,r) p^r (1−p)^{n−r} Z = (X − μ) / σ np, n(1−p) large.
Normal approx to binomial with continuity correction when allowed.
Topic Focus
Hypothesis tests
Root finding and integration estimates.
x_{n+1} = x_n − f(x_n) / f′(x_n) ∫_a^b y dx ≈ h/2 (y₀ + 2y₁ + … + 2y_{n−1} + y_n) Topic Focus
Iteration
Boost your Cambridge exam confidence with these proven study strategies from our tutoring experts.
Edexcel examiners award method marks when you state the relevant formula before substitution — especially in integration and statistics questions.
Draw quick graphs or motion diagrams to confirm limits, signs and directions before plugging values into calculus or mechanics formulas.
Pure maths often underpins mechanics or statistics parts. Note which pure topics feed into applied questions to save revision time.
Practise entering regression, normal distribution and vector calculations on your calculator so you can reproduce them quickly in the exam.
Quick answers about this free PDF, how to use it for exam revision, and how it relates to your official syllabus.
Yes. This Tutopiya formula sheet is free to use and you can download it as a PDF from this page for offline revision. There is no payment or account required for the PDF download.
This page groups key Mathematics formulas in one place for revision. Complete Edexcel International A Level Mathematics (WMA01/WMA02/WMA03) formula sheet for 2026 examinations, covering pure maths, calculus, trigonometry, mechanics and statistics with examiner tips. Always cross-check with your official syllabus and past papers for your exam session.
No. In the exam you must follow only what your exam board allows in the hall—usually the official formula booklet or data sheet where provided. This page is a revision and teaching aid, not a replacement for board-issued materials.
It is written for students preparing for assessments at Upper Secondary in Mathematics, including classroom revision, homework support, and independent study. Teachers and tutors can also share it as a quick reference.
Work through past paper questions, quote the correct formula before substituting values, and check units and notation every time. Pair this sheet with timed practice and mark schemes so you see how examiners expect working to be set out.
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References the Edexcel International AS & A Level Mathematics (WMA01/WMA02/WMA03) specification including Pure Mathematics, Mechanics, and Statistics.
State assumptions (e.g., light string, particle model, normal approximation conditions) whenever you apply these formulas in long-form answers.