120 chart

The hundreds chart, extended to 120 — because first grade doesn’t stop at 100.

120 chart — free printable PDF preview

How to print it

  1. Open the print view. Press Print for a clean print-ready view, or download the PDF or PNG below the chart.
  2. Fit to page. In the print dialog choose “Fit to page” — the chart is laid out for US Letter and scales cleanly onto A4.
  3. Copy freely. Print or photocopy as many as you need for home, classroom or tutoring use. It is free, with no sign-up.

About the 120 chart

US 1st-grade standards expect counting to 120, not 100 — crossing the hundred boundary is exactly where many children wobble ("…109, 110, 200?"). A 120 chart makes those three extra rows routine: same ten-wide layout, same patterns, straight past the scary corner. Use it exactly like a hundreds chart — counting, skip counting, ten-more-ten-less — with the confidence that the tricky 100–120 stretch is on the page.

Frequently asked questions

Why 120 instead of 100?

First-grade standards include counting and reading numerals to 120, and the 100→101 transition is a known stumbling point. The extra rows give that exact practice.

Is the layout the same as a hundreds chart?

Yes — ten numbers per row. It simply continues for two more rows, ending at 120.

What activities work with it?

Everything a hundreds chart does: number hunts, skip-count colouring, one-more/ten-more moves, and fill-in-the-missing-number games across the 100 boundary.

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