🔥 New! 2025 AMC 10 B
Complete problem set with solutions and individual problem pages
The instructions on a -gram bag of coffee beans say that proper brewing of a large mug of pour-over coffee requires grams of coffee beans. What is the greatest number of properly brewed large mugs of coffee that can be made from the coffee beans in that bag?
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- E.
Jerry wrote down the ones digit of each of the first positive squares: . What is the sum of all the numbers Jerry wrote down?
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Let be the ones digit of , then .
which is
A Pascal-like triangle has as the top row and followed by as the second row. In each subsequent row the first number is , the last number is , and, as in the standard Pascal Triangle, each other number in the row is the sum of the two numbers directly above it. The first four rows are shown below.

What is the sum of the digits of the sum of the numbers in the th row?
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Let be the sum of -th row.
Then for .
Since , we have for .
The value of the two-digit number in base seven equals the value of the two-digit number in base nine. What is ?
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implies where
This gives , then , so and for .
Since , we have , thus and .
In , , , and . Let be the center of the circle containing points , , and . What is the degree measure of ?
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The line divides the square region defined by and into an upper region and a lower region. The line divides the lower region into two regions of equal area. Then can be written as , where and are positive integers. What is ?
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Points: , , , , , .
Given :
This gives , so .
Since , we have .
Frances stands meters directly south of a locked gate in a fence that runs east-west. Immediately behind the fence is a box of chocolates, located meters east of the locked gate. An unlocked gate lies meters east of the box, and another unlocked gate lies meters west of the locked gate. Frances can reach the box by walking toward an unlocked gate, passing through it, and walking toward the box. It happens that the total distance Frances would travel would be the same via either unlocked gate. What is value of ?
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Let . Here, , , , , .
Then
Also, , which gives .
Since , we have , which gives .
Emmy says to Max, “I ordered math club sweatshirts today." Max asks, “How much did each shirt cost?" Emmy responds, “I'll give you a hint. The total cost was . , where and are digits and ." After a pause, Max says, “That was a good price." What is ?
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Given , we need and
From , we get . Since is even, is even, so . Thus, .
From , we get , so .
From , we get , which means is odd.
Therefore .
How many ordered triples of integers satisfy the following system of inequalities?
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System of inequalities:
Combining the first and second inequalities, we get . By symmetry, .
Suppose (WLOG).
From the second inequality, , which gives .
Thus, .
Case 1: , then from the first and second inequalities, . Solutions: or .
Case 2: , then from the second inequality, . Since , solutions: or .
Case 3: , then .
In total:
and each give 1 solution
, , each give 3 solutions
Total number =
Let ,and let . What is the sum of all integer values of for which is also an integer?
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We have the following observations:
when
For , we need , so or .
However, , thus .
On Monday, students went to the tutoring center at the same time, and each one was randomly assigned to one of the tutors on duty. On Tuesday, the same students showed up, the same tutors were on duty, and the students were again randomly assigned to the tutors. What is the probability that exactly students met with the same tutor both Monday and Tuesday?
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For the general case with students and tutors:
Let be the case where the -th student has the same tutor, then and .
The -th term inside the bracket equals .
This gives
For any 2 students, the total ways of assigning so that they get the same tutor , are the total ways of assigning the remaining 4 tutors so no students among these 4 get the same tutor:
Therefore, the probability
The figure below shows an equilateral triangle, a rhombus with a angle, and a regular hexagon, each of them containing some mutually tangent congruent disks. Let , , and , respectively, denote the ratio in each case of the total area of the disks to the area of the enclosing polygon.

Which of the following is true?
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Let be the length of a side of an equilateral triangle, be the radius in the 3-tangent-circle case, and be the one-tangent-circle case.
It can be checked that both and equal the ratio of the case.
Then:
Thus .
The altitude to the hypotenuse of a right triangle is divided into two segment of lengths by the median to the shortest side of the triangle. What is the ratio ?
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ith Menelaus Theorem on :
Since :
Thus
Nine athletes, no two of whom are the same height, try out for the basketball team. One at a time, they draw a wristband at random, without replacement, from a bag containing blue bands, red bands, and green bands. They are divided into a blue group, a red group, and a green group. The tallest member of each group is named the group captain. What is the probability that the group captains are the three tallest athletes?
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Total number of assigning bands:
For the three tallest, the number of ways to assign different bands is , and for the remaining 6 players:
Thus, the probability:
The sum can be expressed as , where and are relatively prime positive integers. What is ?
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Similarly:
Therefore:
A circle has been divided into sectors of different sizes. Then of the sectors are painted red, painted green, and painted blue so that no two neighboring sectors are painted the same color. One such coloring is shown below.

How many different colorings are possible?
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3 ways to color region 1. When it is red, the other red can only be region 3, 4 or 5.
Case 1: Region 3 is red, then regions 4 and 6 have the same color, regions 2 and 5 have the same. 2 ways of coloring.
Case 2: Region 4 is red, then 2 ways to color regions 2 and 3 with different colors, and likewise for regions 5 and 6. There should be ways.
Case 3: Region 5 is red, same as Case 1 with 2 ways.
Thus, the total ways .
Consider a decreasing sequence of n positive integers that satisfies the following two conditions:
· The average (arithmetic mean) of the first terms in the sequence is .
· For all the average of the first terms in the sequence is less than the average of the first terms in the sequence.
What is the greatest possible value of ?
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Let be the average of the first terms.
Given and for .
Thus for .
for
For , we need , which gives .
What is the ones digit of the sum
(Recall that denotes the greatest integer less than or equal to .)
- A.
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- E.
For , there are terms of value .
For , there is exactly one term.
Thus:
Both of the first 2 terms have 0 as ones digit, so the answer is 5.
A container has a square bottom, a open square top, and four congruent trapezoidal sides, as shown. Starting when the container is empty, a hose that runs water at a constant rate takes minutes to fill the container up to the midline of the trapezoids.

How many more minutes will it take to fill the remainder of the container?
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Extend the lines so the sides become triangles.
Let be the height of half the container; then the extended cone also has height since the side lengths of the squares are 1, 2, 3 respectively.
Therefore, the time mins.
Four congruent semicircles are inscribed in a square of side length so that their diameters are on the sides of the square, one endpoint of each diameter is at a vertex of the square, and adjacent semicircles are tangent to each other. A small circle centered at the center of the square is tangent to each of the four semicircles, as shown below.

The diameter of the small circle can be written as, where , and are integers. What is ?
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Let be the radius of the small circle and be the larger radius.
Let be the centers, then and .
Since and , we have and .
Then:
Since by symmetry, , i.e., .
Each of the squares in a grid is to be colored red, blue, or yellow in such a way that each red square shares an edge with at least one blue square, each blue square shares an edge with at least one yellow square, and each yellow square shares an edge with at least one red square. Colorings that can be obtained from one another by rotations and/or reflections are to be considered the same. How many different colorings are possible?
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Assume the color of row , column is .
Consider the center grid when it is red.
At least one of , , , is blue.
Suppose = blue (WLOG).
At least one of , is yellow, assume is yellow (WLOG).
Then considering , at least one of and must be red, meaning = red.
Considering , one of its neighbors is blue, meaning = blue.
Considering , one of its neighbors is yellow, meaning = yellow.
For the remaining 3 grids, there are 3 cases:
Case 1: = red, then = blue or = blue.
If = blue, its neighbor does not have yellow (contradiction!).
Thus = blue, and can be either red or yellow. 2 ways.
Case 2: = yellow, then the neighbors of are all yellow, so = blue. can be either red or blue. 2 ways.
Case 3: = blue, then = yellow or = yellow.
However, neither has a neighbor with color red (contradiction!).
By shifting the colors, the total number of ways .
A seven-digit positive integer is chosen at random. What is the probability that the number is divisible by , given that the sum of its digits is ?
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Given with and .
Let , then and .
This gives , so there are numbers.
From , we have and .
Let , then .
For , we need , which gives .
Since and , we must have .
Then , so and .
For with and :
has solutions.
Therefore, there are 6 numbers in total, with probability .
A rectangular grid of souares has rows and columns. Each souare has room for two numbers. Horace and Vera each fill in the grid by putting the numbers from through into the squares. Horace fills the grid horizontally: he puts through in order from left to right into row , puts through into row in order from left to right, and continues similarly through row . Vera fills the grid vertically: she puts through in order from top to bottom into column , then through into column in order from top to bottom, and continues similarly through column . How many squares get two copies of the same number?
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Let and be the numbers filled by Horace and Vera respectively at row , column .
Then:
For :
Let and :
where and .
This gives and for .
There are 11 solutions.
A frog hops along the number line according to the following rules.
· It starts at .
· If it is at , then it moves to with probability and it disappears with probability .
· For , or , if it is at , then it moves to with probability , it moves to with probability , and it disappears with probability .
What is the probability that the frog reaches ?
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Let be the probability that the frog reaches 4 starting at , where .
Then:
From the first equation:
Plugging into the second equation:
Solving the third equation:
From the fourth equation: , which gives .
Square has sides of length . Points and lie on and , respectively, with and . A path begins along the line segment from to and continues by reflecting against the sides of (with congruent incoming and outgoing angles), as shown in the figure. If the path hits a vertex of the square, then it terminates there; otherwise it continues forever.

At which vertex does the path terminate?
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The path continues forever.

We can let the line keep going, making the square reflected.
It suffices to check if line passes for some .
Let line : , then .
So : .
For and : .
The solution is a positive integer solution.
It can be proved that are images of , are images of , are images of , and are images of .
Therefore is an image of .
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