Quick Math Sheets

Printable hundreds chart

Pick 1 to 100 or 1 to 120, choose filled or blank, highlight skip counting, and print a clean PDF in seconds. Free, no account, no ads.

Count

1 to 120 matches the counting range many first-grade classrooms use.

Type

Filled is a reference chart. Blank leaves every cell empty so a student writes the numbers in.

Skip counting

Marks every multiple, bold and underlined on the printer-friendly chart, shaded on the color chart.

Style

Orientation

Live previewHundreds chart
Hundreds chart from 1 to 100
12345678910
11121314151617181920
21222324252627282930
31323334353637383940
41424344454647484950
51525354555657585960
61626364656667686970
71727374757677787980
81828384858687888990
919293949596979899100

Teaching tip

Put a filled chart on the wall for reference, then print a blank chart for the same student to fill in from memory. That switch from reference to recall is where the number sense sticks.

How to use it

A filled chart works as a counting reference on the wall or inside a folder: students find numbers, spot patterns in the columns, and count forward and back. A blank chart flips the job, the student writes every number in, which is one of the most effective ways to practice counting and number order. Print one of each and use them together.

Skip counting

Turn on a skip-counting highlight to mark every multiple of 2, 5, or 10. On the printer-friendly chart the multiples are bold and underlined; on the color chart they are shaded. Counting by 5s and 10s builds the number sense that later makes multiplication feel natural.

Why a 120 chart

Many first-grade classrooms count past 100 so students see that the patterns keep going. The 1 to 120 option adds two more rows in the same grid, useful for practicing what comes after one hundred without a new format to learn.

Practice counting

Charts pair well with worksheets. Browse kindergarten, grade 1, and grade 2 worksheets, addition worksheets for counting on, or make a custom worksheet in seconds. Working on times tables instead? There is also a printable multiplication chart.