Multiplication chart 1–10

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

Multiplication chart 1–10 — free printable PDF preview

How to print it

  1. Open the print view. Press Print for a clean print-ready view, or download the PDF or PNG below the chart.
  2. Fit to page. In the print dialog choose “Fit to page” — the chart is laid out for US Letter and scales cleanly onto A4.
  3. 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.

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