Elimination Method Worksheets for 8th Grade

Solve systems of equations by adding or subtracting equations.

10 worksheets · 3 difficulty levels · Answer keys included

About Elimination Method

Systems of Equations teaches students to solve problems involving two unknowns and two conditions simultaneously. Students learn three methods — graphing, substitution, and elimination — and apply them to real-world problems involving rates, mixtures, and costs. Systems of equations are one of the most powerful problem-solving tools in mathematics.

Elimination is the most efficient method for many systems and is the foundation of matrix row reduction in linear algebra. It illustrates the principle that adding equal quantities to both sides of equations preserves equality — a deep and transferable mathematical insight.

What Your Child Will Learn

  • Add or subtract equations to eliminate a variable
  • Multiply equations by constants to create opposite coefficients
  • Solve and check the solution in both original equations
  • Determine the best multipliers to align coefficients efficiently
  • Recognize when elimination produces a special case (no solution or infinite solutions)

Worksheets by Difficulty

Start with Easy worksheets to build confidence, then progress to Medium and Hard as your student masters each level.

Understanding the Difficulty Levels

Worksheets 1-3 are Easy level — designed to build confidence with simpler numbers and straightforward problem types. Great for introducing the concept or reviewing basics.

Worksheets 4-7 are Medium level — offering a moderate challenge with larger numbers, varied question types, and more problems per worksheet.

Worksheets 8-10 are Hard level — featuring the most challenging problems including multi-step questions, missing values, and real-world applications.

Tips for Parents & Teachers

1

Encourage your student to try all three methods on early problems to understand when each is most efficient.

2

Graphing gives the most visual insight but is least precise — use it for understanding, not as a primary solving method for exact answers.

3

For word problems, the hardest step is defining two variables. Practice this: "Let x = ___ and y = ___."

4

Always verify solutions by substituting into BOTH original equations — a solution is only correct if it satisfies both.

Frequently Asked Questions

What will my child learn from elimination method worksheets?

These 8th Grade elimination method worksheets help students practice systems, elimination, algebra. Each worksheet provides structured practice with clear instructions and varied problem types.

How often should my 8th Grade student practice elimination method?

Consistent practice works best. We recommend 10-15 minutes of focused practice 3-4 times per week. Start with Easy worksheets and progress to Medium and Hard as your student builds confidence.

Are these elimination method worksheets free to print?

Yes, all 8th Grade elimination method worksheets on K12Worksheets are completely free. You can download and print as many as you need for home or classroom use — no signup required. Each worksheet includes a printable answer key on a separate page.

How do I know which elimination method worksheet to start with?

Begin with the Easy worksheets (Worksheets 1–3) to assess your student's current skill level. If they complete these confidently, move to Medium (Worksheets 4–7). Reserve Hard worksheets (Worksheets 8–10) for students who have mastered the basics. If your student struggles with Easy worksheets, revisit prerequisite topics first.