The Great Apple Riddle: How Many Are There, Really?
Internet puzzles have a funny way of making us question our own eyesight and basic math skills. You think you are looking at something simple, and then a caption boldly claims that “90% of people get this wrong.” Suddenly, you are staring at the screen, second-guessing your entire life. This is exactly what happens when you look at the picture below.

At first glance, a simple question: “How many apples are in this image?” It shows several apple halves arranged in a neat square with an empty space in the middle. But depending on how you look at it—logically, mathematically, or even absurdly—there are many different answers. Let’s break down all the possibilities, from the most sensible to the most ridiculous.
1. The Logical Answers (The Math Brain)
If we approach this puzzle like a normal person or a math teacher, we get a few very logical answers.
The Answer is 4 (The Whole Apple Logic)
This is the most popular “smart” answer on the internet. If you look closely at the picture, you don’t see whole apples; you see apples cut perfectly in half.
There are 8 apple halves arranged around the empty center.
Since two halves make one whole apple (2×1/2=1), we simply divide the total halves by two.
8 halves ÷ 2 = 4 whole apples.
This theory assumes a chef took 4 whole apples, sliced them down the middle, and laid them out nicely. It feels clever and satisfies our need for logic.
The Answer is 8 (The Literal Visual Logic)
Some people argue that the question isn’t asking for “whole” apples. It just asks how many apples are in the image.
If you point your finger at each piece and count them one by one, you will count 8 separate items.
Even if they are halved, each one is still fundamentally “an apple” (or a piece of an apple).
Therefore, if you refuse to do any mental geometry, the answer is simply 8.
2. The Creative & Detailed Answers (The Detective Brain)
If you look a bit closer at the visual details in picture, you might notice things that change the number completely.
The Answer is 0 (The Philosophical Twist)
Are there actually any real apples here? No! This is a digital image on a screen. As the famous French painter René Magritte once wrote under a painting of a pipe: “This is not a pipe.” Similarly, these are just pixels, light, and ink configured to look like apples. Furthermore, since none of them are complete, un-sliced apples, a strict observer could argue there are 0 whole apples present.
The Answer is 1 or 2 (The Photographic Trick)
In the world of food photography, editors love to reuse the same perfect item. Look at the halves in the image. They all look incredibly identical, from the shape of the seeds to the curve of the stem. It is highly possible that a photographer took a picture of just one single apple half (or one whole apple cut in two) and then used Photoshop to copy and paste it 8 times to create the square layout. So, physically, only 1 or 2 apples were ever used.
3. The Unreasonable and Absurd Answers (The Chaos Brain)
Now, let’s leave logic behind and dive into the wild, funny, and completely ridiculous theories.
The Answer is 5 (The Missing Middle)
Why is there a giant empty square right in the center of the image? Maybe there was a 5th apple sitting right there, but someone got hungry and ate it before the photo was taken! If you believe in the ghost of the missing middle apple, then the answer is 5.
The Answer is 16 (The Seed Multiplier)
If you want to annoy your friends, you can count the apple seeds instead. Every single apple half clearly shows 2 dark seeds in the core.
8 halves × 2 seeds = 16 seeds.
Since seeds contain the genetic code to grow into brand new apple trees, you could technically argue that there is the potential for 16 apples inside this picture.
The Answer is 0.0001 (The Micro-Apple Theory)
What if the image is actually zooming in on a tiny detail? Maybe this isn’t a normal photo, but a microscopic view of a pattern printed on a tiny piece of paper. If we consider the scale of the universe, the amount of “apple” matter here is basically zero.
Conclusion: Why 90% of People Get It Wrong
The reason this puzzle go viral isn’t because the math is hard. It is because human beings communicate differently.
The literal thinkers see 8 pieces of fruit.
The analytical thinkers do the fractions and see 4 whole apples.
The artists see Photoshop tricks.
So, what is the real answer? If you are taking a strict math test, 4 is your safest bet. But if you want to have fun with it, you can pick any number you like—just be ready to defend your logic! How many did you see first?
















