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