Free step-by-step help: scan with Matematt📝 For teachers and parents
Three ways to use this sheet with the whole class:
A different sheet for each pupil (no copying) + answer key, in one PDF.
Copy the ready link and paste it into your register or WhatsApp: parents open the sheet with one click.
Every printed sheet has a QR to practise step by step on the Matematt app.
Multiplication grid to print
The multiplication grid shows every times table from 1 to 12 at a glance. Print it as a reference, or hide the answers to use it as a fill-in exercise.
✏️ Tip: you can also edit the numbers by clicking on them, to create the exercises you want.
Free step-by-step help: scan with MatemattHow to use these worksheets at home
Memorising times tables needs frequent practice in small doses: five minutes every day beats an hour on Saturday. The weakness of "fixed" printed sheets is that children end up remembering the order of the exercises rather than the answers. That is why every sheet here is always different: press "New sheet" and get new exercises on the same table, so revision stays real.
Tip: print one sheet with the answers hidden for the child and one with the answers shown for you: marking it together right afterwards is when most learning happens.
The right order to learn times tables
1. The easy ones: 2, 10, 5
The most regular: 2 doubles, 10 adds a zero, 5 always ends in 0 or 5. They build confidence fast.
2. 4 and 3
4 is double the 2 (double twice). 3 is built by counting in threes.
3. 6, 7, 8
The trickiest. The commutative property helps: if you know 7×8, you already know 8×7. The multiplication grid makes it visible.
4. The 9 (with the trick)
The digits of the answer always add to 9 (9×4=36 → 3+6=9) and there is the finger trick: it comes last but quickly.
Times tables: frequently asked questions
How do you learn times tables fast?
A little every day: first the easy ones (2, 5, 10), then 3 and 4, finally 6, 7, 8, 9. Tricks help, plus lots of short practice. These worksheets generate always-new exercises so revision never gets boring.
In what order should you learn times tables?
First 2, 10 and 5 (the most regular), then 4 and 3, then 6, 7, 8 and 9. The multiplication grid helps you see that 7×8 and 8×7 give the same answer, halving the facts to memorise.
Are the worksheets free?
Yes, completely. Generate as many as you like, show the answers and print them in A4 or save as PDF from your browser, no sign-up.