Parallelogram Calculator
Find area, perimeter, diagonals, and height of any parallelogram using base, side, and angle.
▱ What is a Parallelogram?
A parallelogram is a four-sided polygon (quadrilateral) where both pairs of opposite sides are parallel and equal in length. Its name comes from the Greek words for "parallel lines." Every parallelogram has two pairs of equal opposite angles - the two acute angles are equal, and the two obtuse angles are equal - and the four angles always sum to 360°.
Parallelograms appear everywhere in the real world. Tilted bookshelves, diamond-shaped floor tiles, the sides of a prism, window shutters, and the cross-section of many structural beams all form parallelograms. In physics, the parallelogram law of forces states that when two forces are represented by adjacent sides of a parallelogram, their resultant is the diagonal - this is fundamental to understanding equilibrium and vector addition.
A crucial distinction in parallelogram geometry is between the slant side and the perpendicular height. The slant side is the actual side of the shape. The perpendicular height is the shortest distance between the two parallel bases - always measured at a right angle to the base. Area is calculated using the perpendicular height, not the slant side. Confusing the two is the most common mistake students make with parallelogram problems.
Familiar shapes are special cases: a rectangle is a parallelogram with all right angles; a rhombus is a parallelogram with all four sides equal; a square is both a rectangle and a rhombus. This calculator handles the general case and works equally well for all these special forms.