Multiplication chart 1–10
The gentler 10×10 grid — the right first chart before the full 1–12 arrives.

How to print it
- Open the print view. Press Print for a clean print-ready view, or download the PDF or PNG below the chart.
- Fit to page. In the print dialog choose “Fit to page” — the chart is laid out for US Letter and scales cleanly onto A4.
- 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 multiplication chart 1–10
A 1–10 multiplication chart covers the core hundred facts without the 11s and 12s, which makes it the right starting grid: big cells, less visual noise, and the tens column as a friendly landmark down the edge. The shaded diagonal still tracks the squares from 1 to 100. Once it feels familiar, graduate to the 1–12 chart that schools expect.
Frequently asked questions
Should we start with a 1–10 or 1–12 chart?
Start on 1–10 if the grid itself is new — fewer cells, bigger type. Move to 1–12 once reading the chart is automatic, since schools test to 12×12.
What are the square numbers on this chart?
1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81 and 100 — the shaded diagonal.
Is it free to print?
Yes — print, download and photocopy freely, no sign-up.