Free Teacher Resources

Multiplication Chart

Name: ______________________
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Free printable resources at freeteacherresources.org

About the Math Charts

A multiplication chart and a hundreds chart solve two different problems. One is a reference for facts students haven't memorized yet; the other is a map for skip-counting, place value, and number patterns. This generator builds either one, filled in for reference or blank for fill-in practice.

The multiplication table size is adjustable up to 15×15, which covers the multiples that come up once a class moves past the standard facts.

How to use it in your classroom

  1. Choose a chart type: multiplication table or hundreds chart.
  2. For a multiplication table, set the size, from a basic 9×9 up to a full 15×15.
  3. Toggle blank on for a fill-in-the-facts practice version, or leave it off for a reference chart.
  4. Print, or pin the filled-in version to a wall as a permanent reference.

Tips from the classroom

  • Keep a filled-in 12×12 multiplication chart in a folder for students who still need a reference during independent work — it's faster than a calculator and keeps focus on the problem at hand.
  • A blank hundreds chart is a quick formative-assessment tool: ask students to fill in just the multiples of a number and you can see place-value understanding at a glance.
  • For skip-counting practice, print a blank hundreds chart and have students circle every fifth or tenth number instead of filling in every digit.
  • Use the blank multiplication chart as a timed fluency check, then hand out the filled version right after as a self-checking key.

Frequently asked questions

What's the largest multiplication table I can print?

Fifteen by fifteen, which covers every fact most upper-elementary and middle school students will need.

Can I get a hundreds chart that's missing some numbers but not others?

Not directly — the blank toggle clears the whole chart. For a partial fill-in, print the blank version and mark it up by hand or have students fill it in themselves.

Does the blank version still show the row and column headers?

Yes. For the multiplication table, the header row and column always show, even in blank mode, so the chart stays usable for fill-in practice.