A-Level Maths: integration techniques you need to know

A-LevelMathsSubject Guides10 min readBy Jono Ellis

Integration is one of the most challenging topics in A-Level Maths, but it's also one of the most rewarding once it clicks. This article covers the key integration techniques you'll need, with worked examples for each method.

Integration is the reverse of differentiation — but the techniques you need are far more varied. That's what makes it interesting.

J

James Thornton

Maths Lead at Cognito

Integration by substitution

Substitution is often the first technique you learn. The idea is to simplify the integral by replacing a complicated expression with a single variable. Look for a function and its derivative within the integrand — that's your cue to use substitution.

For example, to integrate 2x(x² + 1)³, let u = x² + 1, so du = 2x dx. The integral becomes ∫u³ du, which is straightforward.

Tip

Always remember to change the limits of integration when using substitution in a definite integral. Converting back to the original variable at the end is an alternative, but changing limits is usually cleaner.

Integration by parts

Integration by parts is based on the product rule for differentiation. The formula is ∫u dv = uv − ∫v du. The trick is choosing which part of the integrand to call u and which to call dv.

A useful mnemonic is LIATE: Logarithmic, Inverse trig, Algebraic, Trigonometric, Exponential. Choose u from whichever category comes first in this list.

u (differentiate)dv (integrate)When to use
ln xdxIntegrals involving ln x
xeˣ dxProducts of polynomials and exponentials
xsin x dx or cos x dxProducts of polynomials and trig functions
sin x dx or cos x dxProducts of exponentials and trig (apply twice)
Common integration by parts setups using the LIATE rule.

Partial fractions

When you need to integrate a rational function (a fraction where both numerator and denominator are polynomials), partial fractions can break it into simpler pieces. First, factorise the denominator, then express the fraction as a sum of simpler fractions — each of which can be integrated directly.

Warning

If the degree of the numerator is greater than or equal to the degree of the denominator, you must perform polynomial long division first before splitting into partial fractions.

Choosing the right technique

One of the hardest parts of integration at A-Level is recognising which technique to use. Here's a decision framework.

If the integrand contains a composite function and the derivative of the inner function is also present (possibly with a constant multiple), use substitution. For example, ∫cos(3x) dx or ∫2xe^(x²) dx.

If you're integrating something like x·sin x or x²·eˣ, use integration by parts. Apply the LIATE rule to decide which factor to differentiate and which to integrate.

If the integrand is a fraction with polynomials top and bottom, try partial fractions. Factorise the denominator first, then decompose into simpler fractions.

Integrals like ∫sin²x dx or ∫cos²x dx require trig identities (double angle formulae) to rewrite them in an integrable form. Also look out for ∫tan²x dx = ∫(sec²x − 1) dx.

Watch: Integration by substitution worked example

Roughly

25%

of A-Level Maths Paper 1 marks typically involve integration


Practice problems

The only way to get confident with integration is to practise. Work through these problems, then check your answers against the mark scheme.


Pattern recognition

The more integrals you solve, the faster you'll recognise which technique to apply.

Speed under pressure

In the exam, you can't afford to spend 10 minutes deciding on a method. Practice builds automaticity.

Error spotting

Common mistakes — forgetting the constant, sign errors, wrong limits — become obvious when you've seen them before.


Related articles

See all
GCSE maths formulas: which ones you need to know in 2026
Subject Guides5 min

GCSE maths formulas: which ones you need to know in 2026

Spaced repetition explained: the science behind smarter revision
Study Techniques5 min

Spaced repetition explained: the science behind smarter revision

How to create a revision timetable that actually works
Study Techniques5 min

How to create a revision timetable that actually works