Times Tables Practice
Multiplication & division · the 8 times table
saporaAnswer key
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Write each answer on the line. Missing-number questions ask for the value of the box.

Tap New sheet for a fresh set. Print or Save as PDF for a clean A4 copy.

How to use this with your childA few honest minutes beat an hour of busywork.

Times-table recall is one of the highest-leverage skills in primary maths — it underpins division, fractions, area and more. The trick is short, frequent practice, and pairing each multiplication fact with its division partner so the relationship sticks.

  1. Start with one table at a time (Single table). Once that is secure, switch to Mixed tables to keep it sharp.
  2. Use Missing numbers to push from rote recall toward real understanding of the inverse relationship.
  3. Mark together with Show answers, then regenerate. Aim for accuracy first, then speed.
sapora

Tables learned. Multiplicative thinking built.

Sapora teaches the why behind the times tables — and the whole New Zealand maths curriculum, years 1 to 13 — adapting to your child as they grow. No free trial; a 30-day money-back guarantee.

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Questions parents ask

Is this free to use?

Yes — no login, no limit. Generate and print as many sheets as you need.

Which times tables should my child learn first?

A common order is 2, 5 and 10, then 3, 4 and 8, then 6, 7, 9, and finally 11 and 12. Use the Single table option to focus on one at a time.

What are the missing-number questions for?

They turn a known multiplication fact around (for example, 8 × ▢ = 56), which builds the link between multiplication and division.

What is Sapora?

Sapora is a New Zealand maths programme for years 1 to 13. There is no free trial; it comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.