Free Multiplication Table Generator

A printable multiplication table you can generate in seconds. Pick the row and column ranges, hit print, save as PDF or send to paper. No signup, no email gate, no watermark on the table itself. Useful as a reference while a kid is still building automaticity — pair it with a daily 5-minute spaced session for the actual memorization work.

Generate Your Table

×0123456789101112
00000000000000
10123456789101112
2024681012141618202224
30369121518212427303336
404812162024283236404448
5051015202530354045505560
6061218243036424854606672
7071421283542495663707784
8081624324048566472808896
90918273645546372819099108
100102030405060708090100110120
110112233445566778899110121132
1201224364860728496108120132144

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How to Use This With a Kid Who Is Still Learning

A printed table is a reference, not a memorization tool. Looking at a fact is not the same thing as recalling it. The pairing that actually works:

  1. Print the table and tape it inside the kid's homework folder.
  2. Use the table as a lookup while doing real math (long multiplication, word problems) — the goal is not to slow the kid down on the larger task.
  3. Separately, run 5 minutes a day of spaced repetition practice. That is where the actual memorization happens.
  4. When the kid stops reaching for the table on a given fact, it has graduated. Most kids stop reaching for 0s, 1s, 2s, 5s, and 10s within a week of starting daily practice.

Other Free Tools and Resources

For a printable progress sheet that lives next to the table, grab the math mastery tracker. For the underlying method, see how to memorize multiplication tables and master multiplication in 30 days.

Frequently Asked Questions

Pick the row and column ranges, then tap "Print or Save as PDF." Your browser opens its print dialog — choose "Save as PDF" to download, or pick a printer to print on paper. The tool is free and unlimited.

Any whole-number row and column range between 0 and 20. The classic 0-12 grid is the default and the one most US standards target by end of 3rd grade. Older kids working toward 24x24 mental math can extend the grid up to 20.

Yes — no signup, no email gate, no watermark. Print as many copies as you need. If you want to teach the kid to actually memorize the table (not just look at it), pair the printable with a 5-minute spaced repetition session.

Yes. Print as many copies as you need for your students. A small "Powered by mathbuilders.com" attribution stays at the bottom of the printed sheet but does not interfere with the table itself.

Reference, not memorization. A printed table is a lookup aid while the kid is still building automaticity. The memorization itself comes from short daily spaced retrieval — the table is the safety net.