Blank hundreds chart

The same ten-by-ten grid, completely empty — for writing the numbers 1 to 100 by hand.

Blank hundreds 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 blank hundreds chart

Writing the numbers into a blank hundreds chart is one of the best number-sense workouts for K–1: it practises numeral formation, one-to-one correspondence and the row-of-ten structure all at once. Teachers also use it for puzzles — fill in only the fives column, only the evens, or start from a random number and work outwards. Laminate one and a dry-erase marker turns it into a reusable centre activity.

Frequently asked questions

How do you use a blank hundreds chart?

Students write 1–100 in order, or complete puzzle versions: only even numbers, only multiples of 5, or filling the neighbours around a given number.

What skills does it build?

Numeral writing, counting sequence, and the tens-and-ones structure of two-digit numbers — the foundation for place value.

Can I reuse it?

Print and laminate it (or slip it into a plastic pocket) and it works endlessly with dry-erase markers.

More number charts