The best math printables for each grade (K–5)

Updated 2026-07-08 · MathSheetLab guides

The best math printables for each grade (K–5) — related printable preview

Kindergarten & 1st grade

Kindergarten runs on the number chart 1–20 and ten frames — recognition and five-structure before anything else. First grade’s essentials are the 120 chart (counting past the hundred boundary is the year’s boss fight) and the addition chart as facts within 20 get built. Number lines join in as soon as add-and-subtract stories start.

2nd & 3rd grade

Second grade earns its keep with two-digit addition and subtraction worksheets (mixed regrouping) plus the place value chart to 1,000. Third grade is the multiplication year: the 1–12 chart on the wall, the blank chart as the weekly test, the division chart to mirror it, and fraction strips when parts-of-a-whole arrive.

4th & 5th grade

Fourth grade stretches place value to the millions — the dictation exercise on the place value chart never gets old — while multiplication worksheets step up in digits. Fifth grade uses the big reference charts (1–20, 30×30) as mental-math scaffolding and leans on fraction strips for equivalence and unlike denominators.

One habit above all

Whatever the grade: a ten-minute daily routine beats an hour on Sunday. Pick the two printables for the current unit, keep them in a folder, and let the generator supply a fresh practice sheet whenever repetition goes stale.

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