← Back to Hub
📊 Full 12×12 Chart 🎨 4 Color Themes 🖨️ Free Printable

Multiplication Chart 1–12

The complete interactive times table chart — color-coded by row, click any cell to highlight its row and column, focus on a single table, and print in one click.

144
Facts displayed
4
Color themes
1-click
Print ready

Complete Times Table Chart

Multiplication Chart 1–12

mamyworksheet.com · Free for classroom and home use

💡 Click any cell to lock row & column highlight. Click a header number to highlight a full line.

× 2 — All Facts

How to Use This Chart Effectively

A chart is a reference tool, not a memorization shortcut. Use it actively.

👆

Click Before You Look

Before clicking a cell, say the answer aloud first. Then click to confirm. This turns the chart into an active recall tool — not just a lookup table.

🎯

Focus One Table at a Time

Use the "Focus table" dropdown to isolate one row. Study it for 2 minutes, then switch to the quiz to test yourself while the chart is hidden.

🖨️

Print and Post It

Stick the printed chart somewhere visible — fridge, desk, bathroom door. Passive exposure during daily routines helps encode facts unconsciously.

🌈

Use Color to Group Facts

The rainbow theme groups each row in its own color. Research shows color-coding improves visual memory — especially for ages 6–10.

📐

Spot the Symmetry

The chart is perfectly symmetrical along its diagonal. 3×7 = 7×3. Finding this visually helps students understand the commutative law intuitively.

🔢

Find the Patterns

The ×5 column always ends in 0 or 5. The ×9 column always has digits that sum to 9. These visual patterns stick faster than rote memorization.

Frequently Asked Questions

A multiplication chart is a 12×12 grid showing the product of every pair of numbers from 1 to 12. Each cell holds the answer to multiplying its row number by its column number — a complete visual reference for all 144 multiplication facts.
Find the first number in the left column and the second in the top row. Follow them until they meet — that cell is the answer. Example: row 6, column 7 → the cell shows 42, so 6×7=42.
A chart is scaffolding — a reference while building fluency, not a permanent replacement for memory. The goal is to use it less and less as facts become automatic. Using it while learning is completely appropriate and encouraged.
Yes — completely free. Click the Print Chart button. The page automatically hides all ads, navigation, and UI — only the clean chart prints on your A4 or Letter-size page.
Because multiplication is commutative — 3×7 = 7×3 = 21 always. This mirrors the chart along its top-left to bottom-right diagonal, meaning students only need to memorize 78 unique facts, not 144.