The number of vertices is 720° divided by the vertex angle defect.
| Name (Vertex configuration) | Transparent | Solid | Net | Faces | Faces (By type) | Edges | Vertices | Symmetry group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| truncated tetrahedron (3.6.6) | (truncatedtetrahedron.gif) | 8 | 4 triangles 4 hexagons | 18 | 12 | Td | ||
| cuboctahedron (3.4.3.4) | (cuboctahedron.gif) | 14 | 8 triangles 6 squares | 24 | 12 | Oh | ||
| truncated cube or truncated hexahedron (3.8.8) | (truncatedhexahedron.gif) | 14 | 8 triangles 6 octagons | 36 | 24 | Oh | ||
| truncated octahedron (4.6.6) | (truncatedoctahedron.gif) | 14 | 6 squares 8 hexagons | 36 | 24 | Oh | ||
| rhombicuboctahedron or small rhombicuboctahedron (3.4.4.4 ) | (rhombicuboctahedron.gif) | 26 | 8 triangles 18 squares | 48 | 24 | Oh | ||
| truncated cuboctahedron or great rhombicuboctahedron (4.6.8) | (truncatedcuboctahedron.gif) | 26 | 12 squares 8 hexagons 6 octagons | 72 | 48 | Oh | ||
| snub cube or snub hexahedron or snub cuboctahedron (2 chiral forms) (3.3.3.3.4) | (snubhexahedronccw.gif) (snubhexahedroncw.gif) | 38 | 32 triangles 6 squares | 60 | 24 | O | ||
| icosidodecahedron (3.5.3.5) | (icosidodecahedron.gif) | 32 | 20 triangles 12 pentagons | 60 | 30 | Ih | ||
| truncated dodecahedron (3.10.10) | (truncateddodecahedron.gif) | 32 | 20 triangles 12 decagons | 90 | 60 | Ih | ||
| truncated icosahedron or buckyball or football/soccer ball (5.6.6 ) | (truncatedicosahedron.gif) | 32 | 12 pentagons 20 hexagons | 90 | 60 | Ih | ||
| rhombicosidodecahedron or small rhombicosidodecahedron (3.4.5.4) | (rhombicosidodecahedron.gif) | 62 | 20 triangles 30 squares 12 pentagons | 120 | 60 | Ih | ||
| truncated icosidodecahedron or great rhombicosidodecahedron (4.6.10) | (truncatedicosidodecahedron.gif) | 62 | 30 squares 20 hexagons 12 decagons | 180 | 120 | Ih | ||
| snub dodecahedron or snub icosidodecahedron (2 chiral forms) (3.3.3.3.5) | (snubdodecahedronccw.gif) (snubdodecahedroncw.gif) | 92 | 80 triangles 12 pentagons | 150 | 60 | I |
The cuboctahedron and icosidodecahedron are edge-uniform and are called quasi-regular.
The snub cube and snub dodecahedron are known as chiral, as they come in a left-handed (Latin: levomorph or laevomorph) form and right-handed (Latin: dextromorph) form. When something comes in multiple forms which are each other's three-dimensional mirror image, these forms may be called enantiomorphs. (This nomenclature is also used for the forms of certain chemical compounds).
The duals of the Archimedean solids are called the Catalan solids. Together with the bipyramids and trapezohedra, these are the face-uniform solids with regular vertices.