Quick Math Sheets

Printable addition table

Pick your facts, choose filled or blank, and print a clean addition chart in seconds. Free, no account, no ads.

Facts

Addends run 0 to your top number, so facts to 10 gives sums up to 20.

Type

Filled is a reference table. Blank leaves each sum empty to fill in.

Highlight

Marks the doubles or making-ten pattern on the Color table for teaching a strategy.

Style

Orientation

Live previewAddition
Addition table from 0 to 10
plus012345678910
0012345678910
11234567891011
223456789101112
3345678910111213
44567891011121314
556789101112131415
6678910111213141516
77891011121314151617
889101112131415161718
9910111213141516171819
101011121314151617181920

How to use it

A filled table works as a reference on the wall or in a folder. A blank table gives a student every sum to fill in, which is one of the best ways to move from looking up an addition fact to knowing it. Print one of each and use them together.

Doubles and making ten

The Highlight control marks two of the most useful patterns. Doubles run down the middle of the table, from 0 plus 0 to your top number plus itself. Making ten is the slanting line where the two addends add to ten. Highlighting one pattern at a time is a simple way to teach a strategy.

Read it both ways

The table is a mirror across the middle, so 3 plus 5 and 5 plus 3 sit in matching spots and give the same sum. That is a clear way to show that the order of the addends does not change the answer, which cuts the number of facts to learn about in half.

Practice the facts

Once a table is in hand, build fluency with targeted practice. Addition worksheets cover facts within 10 and 20 through multi-digit work, or make a custom worksheet in seconds.

A simple routine

Print a filled table to keep nearby, then print a blank one and fill it in from memory a row at a time. Check the two against each other, and highlight doubles or making ten when a pattern needs a little extra attention.