About Free Printable Multiplication Chart for Classrooms & Homes
Free printable multiplication times table chart for parents, teachers, and homeschoolers. Choose 1–10, 1–12, 1–15, or 1–20. Complete, blank, or partially filled. Colour or black and white. One-click print.
How to use
- Pick the range. 1-10 is the standard CCSS Grade 3 range — what students are expected to know fluently by year-end. 1-12 is the most common classroom extension (covers the 11s and 12s most teachers also teach). 1-15 and 1-20 are for advanced students or as a desk reference for older grades.
- Choose the style. Complete shows every product filled in — print it as a wall poster, classroom reference, or desk card. Blank leaves all the cells empty so students can fill it in from memory — this is the standard way teachers assess multiplication fluency (Grade 3 students should complete a 1-10 blank chart in 5-10 minutes). Partially filled shows every other row, useful for mid-year practice when students have memorized about half the facts.
- Pick black-and-white or color-coded. Black-and-white is best for printer-friendly classroom copies (color ink is expensive). Color-coded shades each multiplier column a different soft color — useful for visual learners and helps students spot patterns (e.g., the 5s column ends in 0 or 5, the 9s digits sum to 9). Toggle 'Highlight perfect squares' to draw attention to the diagonal (1, 4, 9, 16, 25...) — these are anchor facts most curricula teach first.
- Customize the title (optional). Type your own title in the Custom Title field — useful if you want it to say 'Sarah's Times Table' or 'Mrs. Johnson's Class — September 2026'. The title prints at the top of the chart. Leave it blank to use the default.
- Tap Print Chart. The chart prints to a single page (Letter or A4 — your printer's default). Use your browser's print dialog to choose 'Save as PDF' if you want a digital copy to share or store. The print output is exactly what you see in the preview — no surprises.
Frequently asked questions
Is this multiplication chart actually free?
Yes — fully free, no signup, no email gate, no watermark on the print, no membership upsell. Print as many copies as you need. The only branding on the printed page is a small 'toolfluency.com' line in the footer, which teachers can fold or trim if they prefer. We'd just appreciate it if you bookmark the page or share it with a colleague who needs it.
What's the difference between a complete chart, blank chart, and partial chart?
Complete charts show every product (1×1=1 through n×n=n²). Use them as a desk reference for students learning multiplication, a wall poster in your classroom, or a quick-reference card students keep in a folder. Blank charts have empty cells in the body — students fill them in from memory. This is the gold-standard way to assess multiplication fluency (Common Core 3.OA.C.7). Partial charts alternate filled and blank rows, which is useful for mid-year practice when students have memorized roughly half the facts and need scaffolding to build the rest.
Which range should I print — 1-10, 1-12, 1-15, or 1-20?
1-10 is the Common Core standard for Grade 3 (CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.3.OA.C.7 — fluently multiply within 100). Most US elementary teachers print this version. 1-12 is the traditional 'times tables' range many curricula still use, especially in private schools and some districts that go beyond CCSS minimums. 1-15 is useful for advanced Grade 4-5 students or as a classroom reference covering the products into the 200s. 1-20 covers products to 400, useful as a math department wall chart or for accelerated learners. The cell sizing automatically scales down for the larger ranges so everything still fits on one printed page.
What grade level is this chart for?
Multiplication is formally introduced in Grade 3 in both US and Canadian curricula. US (Common Core): by end of Grade 3 students fluently multiply within 100 (CCSS 3.OA.C.7) — the 1-10 chart is the reference. Ontario 2020: Grade 3 only requires recall of ×2, ×5, ×10 facts (3.B2.2); full 1×1 to 10×10 recall is the Grade 4 target (4.B2.2). WNCP provinces (Alberta, BC, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Atlantic): multiplication to 5×5 in Grade 3 (3.N.11); 9×9 recall by Grade 4 (4.N.3). Quebec PFEQ introduces multiplication in Cycle 2 (Grades 3-4). Grade 4 extends to multi-digit multiplication where the 1-12 chart serves as a reference. Grade 5 students use it for review and decimal/fraction multiplication. Grades 1-2 students working ahead can use the chart as an introduction to skip-counting patterns (the 2s column = counting by 2s, the 5s column = counting by 5s).
Why are the diagonal cells highlighted in amber?
The diagonal (1×1, 2×2, 3×3, 4×4, 5×5...) shows the perfect squares — products of a number multiplied by itself. These are the anchor facts most multiplication curricula teach first because they're easier to memorize and form a visual pattern across the chart that helps students navigate. They're also the foundation for square root concepts taught in later grades. If you'd rather have a uniform-looking chart with no highlight, toggle 'Highlight perfect squares' off.
Can I use the color-coded version for color-blind students?
The color-coded version uses light tints to distinguish multiplier columns, but the colors are intentionally subtle — they're decorative aids, not the only way to read the chart. The numbers themselves remain the primary information. If you have students with color vision deficiency, the black-and-white version is fully accessible and is the recommended default for classroom use anyway (saves color ink and prints reliably on any printer).
How do I print it without color (to save ink)?
Choose 'Black & white' from the Color dropdown. This removes both the column tints and the diagonal highlight color. The chart prints cleanly with just black borders and text. The header bar (top row and left column) prints as a dark gray fill — this is part of the design and uses minimal ink. If your printer is set to grayscale mode, the chart will print correctly even if you accidentally left the color version selected.
Can I use this for fluency assessments / 'mad minute' style tests?
Yes — print the Blank version and time your students. Common timed fluency benchmarks: a Grade 3 student should complete a 1-10 blank chart (100 facts) in about 10 minutes by spring; a Grade 4 student in 5-7 minutes; a Grade 5 student in 3-5 minutes. The Blank chart deliberately doesn't number the cells (rows and columns are still labeled) so students must compute each product independently. Pair with our timed multiplication drill worksheets for additional fluency practice.
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