Addition Chart Generator Addition Chart
Create clean, printable addition charts in seconds. Make a filled addition table from 0 to 10 or 0 to 12, a blank chart for practice, a color-coded facts chart, or a 1-100 addition grid. Free for teachers, parents, and students.
Addition Chart Generator
Your addition chart will appear here
Describe your addition chart and click Generate
Addition Chart Examples
Browse addition charts made with Figviz, or generate your own above
Addition Chart 0-10
A complete addition table from 0 to 10, with addends along the header row and column and the correct sum in each cell, ideal for fact fluency practice.
Addition Chart to 12
An extended addition table running from 0 to 12, useful for students who have mastered facts to 10 and are ready for larger sums.
Blank Addition Chart
A blank addition chart with addends 0 to 10 in the header row and column and empty cells, so students can fill in each sum themselves.
Addition Chart 1-100 Grid
A 1-100 addition grid arranged in a 10 by 10 square, used to count on, spot patterns, and add by moving across rows and down columns.
Color-Coded Addition Chart
A color-coded addition table from 0 to 10 with soft shading on the header row, header column, and diagonals to reveal patterns and symmetry.
Addition Facts Worksheet
An addition facts worksheet pairing a small reference chart with blank practice rows, ready for students to recall and write sums.
What is an addition chart?
An addition chart, also called an addition table, is a grid that shows the sum of two numbers. The addends run along the top header row and down the left header column, usually from 0 to 10, 0 to 12, or beyond, and each interior cell holds the answer to adding the number at the top of its column to the number at the start of its row. It is the addition mirror of a multiplication table. Students use an addition chart to look up facts, check their work, and spot the patterns that make mental math faster. An addition chart generator turns a short description into a clean, printable table with correct, legible sums, so you can skip the tedious typing and go straight to teaching.
How to read and use an addition chart
Blank vs filled charts and the patterns they reveal
A filled addition chart is a ready reference: every sum is printed, so students can look up facts and focus on understanding rather than calculation. A blank chart keeps the addend headers but leaves the interior empty, turning the table into a practice or assessment tool that students complete from memory. Either version reveals the same powerful patterns. Reading the chart from top to bottom or left to right shows commutativity, because the sum at row 3 column 5 matches the sum at row 5 column 3, making the whole table symmetric across its main diagonal. The diagonal itself lists the doubles, such as 4 plus 4 and 7 plus 7. Each row and each column counts up by one, so once students see the structure they can reconstruct any missing fact instead of memorizing in isolation.
How to make an addition chart with Figviz
Classroom and printable uses
Frequently asked questions
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