MathCharts

Chart Maker

Multiplication Chart Maker

Customize your chart — adjust range, mode, and paper size. Download or print when ready.

Paper Preview — 1-12 Blank

A4 Portrait · Full

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How to Use the Multiplication Chart Maker

Set your desired range — choose from presets like 1-12 or 1-20, or enter a custom range up to 30×30. Pick a display mode: Filled shows every product for reference, Blank leaves all cells empty for practice, and Missing Numbers hides a percentage of cells for quiz-style drills. Select a visual theme, paper size (A4 or US Letter), and orientation. When you’re happy with the preview, download as PDF or PNG, or print directly from your browser. The layout adjusts automatically — larger charts switch to compact or multi-page format to stay readable.

What is a Multiplication Chart

A multiplication chart is a visual grid that organizes times tables into rows and columns. Each axis runs from 1 to 12 (or higher), and every cell contains the product of its row and column numbers. Teachers use multiplication charts from 2nd through 5th grade to introduce times tables, reinforce skip-counting, and build fluency with multiplication facts. A filled chart lets students check their work and spot number patterns like squares and symmetry. A blank chart turns the same grid into a self-quiz — students fill in each cell from memory. This site offers both, plus a customizable maker that generates charts for any range up to 30×30, with color-coded themes that make learning more engaging.

Frequently Asked Questions

A multiplication chart is a grid that shows the products of numbers. Each row and column represents a number, and the cell where they meet shows the result of multiplying them. It helps students memorize times tables from 1×1 up to 12×12 or beyond.

Pick a row number and a column number. Trace them until they meet — the cell at the intersection is the product. For example, row 3 and column 4 meet at 12, so 3 × 4 = 12.

Most children start using multiplication charts around 2nd or 3rd grade (ages 7-9). A filled 1-12 chart is great for reference, while blank charts help older kids practice recall.

Start with the easy rows (1, 2, 5, 10). Use a missing-number chart for quiz practice. Consistent short sessions work better than long drills. The color-coded themes on this site help kids spot patterns like squares and skip-counting.

A filled chart shows all the products filled in — great for reference and pattern-spotting. A blank chart has empty cells for students to complete themselves, which builds recall and confidence.

Yes. Click Download PDF for a print-ready file optimized for A4 and US Letter paper. You can also print directly from your browser — the chart scales to fit the page.

The Chart Maker supports ranges from 1×1 up to 30×30. Larger charts automatically switch to compact or paged layout so they stay readable when printed.

Yes, completely free. No sign-up, no email, no ads. Customize your chart, download as PDF or PNG, and print — all without creating an account.