Equilateral Triangle Calculator
Find all properties of an equilateral triangle from its side, height, or area.
△ What is an Equilateral Triangle?
An equilateral triangle is a triangle in which all three sides are equal in length and all three interior angles are exactly 60°. It is the most symmetric of all triangles — it has three lines of symmetry, one through each vertex and the midpoint of the opposite side. Because all angles are equal, it is also called an equiangular triangle. For triangles specifically, equilateral and equiangular are equivalent: any triangle with all sides equal must have all angles equal, and vice versa.
The key formulas all involve √3 because the height of an equilateral triangle — found by the Pythagorean theorem — is h = (s√3)/2. The area then follows from A = ½ × base × height = ½ × s × s√3/2 = (s²√3)/4. The approximate value √3 ≈ 1.7321, so the area is about 0.433 × s².
Equilateral triangles have a special relationship with regular hexagons: a regular hexagon is made up of six equilateral triangles. They also tile the plane (tessellate) along with squares and regular hexagons — the only three regular polygons that can fill a flat surface without gaps. This property makes equilateral triangles appear in honeycomb structures, crystal lattices, triangular grids, and architectural truss designs.
All four classical triangle centers (centroid, circumcenter, incenter, orthocenter) coincide at the same point in an equilateral triangle. The inradius (r = s√3/6) and circumradius (R = s√3/3) satisfy R = 2r — the circumradius is exactly twice the inradius, a relationship unique to equilateral triangles. These properties make the equilateral triangle the fundamental building block of many geometric and physical structures.