You searched “multiplication chart 10×10” and you just want the thing. ๐
So here it is. A free 10×10 times table chart, plus a blank version and a color-coded version, no more clicking between three different posts to find the one you actually need.
This is the chart most kids meet first, since schools usually teach facts 1 through 10 before moving on. Already crushed it? Jump up to theย 12×12 chart.
Working on skip counting first? Grab the skip counting by tens flashcards. And if you want a companion for place value, our hundreds chart is a great add-on.
Print the filled-in chart first so your student gets comfortable reading a grid. Row across, column down, meet in the middle ๐ฏ
Once that clicks, move to the blank one for practice. Save the color-coded version for the wall, not the backpack.
How to Use the Filled-In Chart ๐
Start here if multiplication is brand new. Have your student trace one row with a finger while saying the facts out loud, like “6, 12, 18, 24.”
Teacher Tip: pick one row a day for the first two weeks. Monday is the 2s, Tuesday the 3s. Way less overwhelming than dumping the whole chart on day one.
See More In:
How to Use the Blank Chart โ๏ธ
This is your quiz, not your teaching tool. Give kids 3 to 5 minutes to fill in what they remember, no chart to peek at.
Mom Tip: hand out a blank chart cold on Monday, then again on Friday. Same five minutes, no warning. Comparing the two shows real growth without a formal test.
How to Use the Color-Coded Chart ๐
Post this one somewhere kids walk past every day. Color blocks make patterns pop, even out of the corner of an eye.
Teacher Tip: try a “color of the week.” Week one, drill only the blue row during morning warm-ups. By month’s end you’ve covered the whole chart and nobody felt buried.
- Desk reference:ย tape the filled-in chart inside a folder or binder so it’s always within reach.
- Fact family hunts:ย call out a number like 6 and have kids trace every fact in that row and column.
- Square number spotting:ย trace the diagonal (1×1, 2×2, 3×3…) and talk about why those numbers form a pattern.
- Color-in fact families:ย print a second blank chart and let kids color each row a different color as they fill it in. Instant bulletin board piece when they’re done. ๐จ
- Array art:ย have kids build a small array with counters or LEGO bricks for a fact from the chart, then check their answer against it.
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Who These Are For ๐
- Elementary students learning times tables for the first time
- Teachers who want a no-prep desk reference or bulletin board piece
- Homeschool parents building a daily math routine
- Tutors who need a quick visual for one-on-one sessions
- Kids who do better with color and visual patterns than plain numbers
More Multiplication Chart Sets ๐ข
- Multiplication Chart 12×12: the next step up once 1 through 10 feels easy, with its own blank and color-coded versions built in.
- Multiplication Chart 15×15: for students ready to push past the standard facts.
- Multiplication Chart 20×20: a bigger reference for advanced learners or upper elementary math.
- Multiplication Chart 50×50: our biggest chart, great for a wall-sized classroom reference.
More Free Printables ๐
- Hundreds Chart 1-100: a natural next step once multiplication starts connecting to place value.
- Skip Counting by Tens Flashcards: builds the counting patterns that make multiplication click faster.
- Numbers 0-20 Flashcards: solid for younger kids who still need number recognition support.
- Graph Paper With Numbers: handy for kids who want to build their own arrays or grids by hand.
Multiplication Chart 10×10 (Filled In)
Great for: kids just starting multiplication who need a full reference to check their work against.
Multiplication Chart 10×10 (Blank)
Great for: testing recall, timed drills, and tracking progress since there are no answers printed.
Multiplication Chart 10×10 (Color-Coded)
Great for: visual learners, bulletin board displays, and kids who need color cues to spot patterns faster.
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FAQ ๐ฌ
Are these free to download?
Yup! All three versions are free. No email, no account, just click and print. ๐จ๏ธ
Can I use these in my classroom?
Absolutely. Print as many copies as you need for your students.
Which version should I start with?
Start with the filled-in chart so kids get comfortable reading the grid. Then move to blank for practice, and hang the color-coded one on the wall.
Can I print these in black and white?
The filled-in and blank charts print great in black and white. The color-coded one is best in color, but it still works in grayscale if that’s all you’ve got.
My child knows 1-10 already. What’s next?
Head to the 12×12 chart next. Most schools teach through 12 before moving to bigger numbers.

