Division Worksheets
Free division worksheets with answer key. No login or account needed. From the basics of visual problems to more complex long division problems to word division problems, we've got you covered. A grading column and quick grade scale maker grading a breeze and a modified pages help with lower level learners or when just introducing a topic. Great for teachers or for homeschool.
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Preparing For Division
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About these worksheets
These worksheets prepare students for division by building the prerequisite skills they need. Activities include relating division to multiplication, completing multiplication and division charts, using number lines to model division, understanding how many times one number goes into another, checking division answers with multiplication, interpreting remainders in word problems, and modeling division as repeated subtraction. Spanning third through fourth grade standards.
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- Use multiplication facts to solve division problems.
- Explain how division and multiplication are connected as opposite operations.
- Find the missing number in a related multiplication or division fact.
- Use a multiplication fact to check whether a division answer makes sense.
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- Use a number line to solve division problems by making equal jumps.
- Count how many jumps it takes to reach the total to find the quotient.
- Understand division as repeated subtraction on a number line.
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- Practice figuring out how many times one number goes into another number.
- Use multiplication facts to find division answers faster.
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- Use multiplication to check whether a division answer makes sense.
- Check division problems that have remainders by multiplying and adding the remainder.
- Spot when a quotient or remainder is incorrect by comparing it to the original dividend.

- Practice dividing by 2, 5, and 10 and naming the remainder.
- Learn to tell when a number divides evenly and when there will be leftovers.

- Use a number line to solve division by making equal jumps backward.
- Understand division as repeated subtraction until you reach zero.
- Count how many equal jumps it takes to find the quotient.

- Use a number line to solve division by making equal jumps backward over and over.
- Count the jumps to find the quotient in a division problem.
- Figure out the remainder by seeing how many are left when you can’t make another full jump.
- Write the answer as a quotient with a remainder (for example, 17 ÷ 5 = 3 R2).
Traditional Division
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About these worksheets
These worksheets cover traditional long division methods across multiple skill levels. Students practice dividing within 100, dividing three- and four-digit numbers by one- and two-digit divisors, handling zeros in the quotient, using partial quotients, dividing with helper grids, and dividing multiples of ten. Both standard and international division formats are included, spanning third through sixth grade.
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- Practice basic division facts from 1 to 10.
- Figure out how many equal groups you can make from a number.
- Use division to find how many are in each group when you share evenly.
- Get faster and more accurate at mental division.
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- Divide numbers that end in zeros by 10, 100, or 1,000.
- Use place value to move digits to the right when dividing by powers of ten.
- Solve division facts with multiples of ten quickly in your head.
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- Use place value to make division with tens, hundreds, and thousands quicker.
- Keep track of zeros correctly when dividing by 10, 100, or 1,000.
- Solve division facts mentally when the numbers are multiples of ten.

- Practice dividing multi-digit numbers using the long division steps.
- Use a helper grid to keep place values lined up while you divide.
- Find the quotient and any remainder in a division problem.
- Bring down digits and continue dividing until the problem is finished.
Division - Estimating
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About these worksheets
These worksheets develop estimation skills for division. Students practice rounding numbers to find approximate quotients, choosing compatible numbers that divide evenly, and using estimation to check whether exact answers are reasonable. Designed for fourth grade.
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- Estimate the answer when dividing a 3-digit number by a 2-digit number.
- Round numbers to make division easier to do in your head.
- Use compatible (friendly) numbers to find a close quotient.
- Choose the closest estimate from a set of possible answers.
About these worksheets
Division drill worksheets build speed and accuracy with basic division facts. Each worksheet contains 100 problems focused on a specific divisor — from 2s through 10s — plus mixed fact sets. These are ideal for timed practice, daily warm-ups, or fact fluency assessments.

- Practice dividing numbers by 2 to find half of a group.
- Get faster and more confident with basic division facts for 2.

- Get faster at recalling the division facts for 3 without counting.

- Get faster at 4s division facts and quotients.

- Get faster and more accurate with 5s division facts from memory.

- Get faster and more accurate with the 6s division facts from memory.

- Get faster at recalling division facts for 7 without using a calculator.

- Get faster at recalling the division facts for 8 without counting.

- Get faster and more accurate with 9 division facts from memory.

- Practice dividing numbers by 10 quickly and accurately.
- Learn how dividing by 10 makes the number 10 times smaller.

- Practice dividing numbers from 1 to 10 and saying the quotient quickly.
- Build accuracy with basic division facts so harder division problems feel easier later.
- Recognize that division is the opposite of multiplication for the same fact family.

- Divide numbers by 2 to find half of a number.
- Use division facts for 2 to answer problems quickly and accurately.