counting money Worksheets
Free money worksheets with answer key. No login or account needed. From counting coins and making change to identifying currency, 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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About these worksheets
These worksheets help students learn to count and identify money. Activities include counting mixed coins and bills, counting dollar bills up to twenty dollars, counting change within a dollar using quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies, and identifying coins by appearance and name. Designed for early elementary students.

- Count mixed coins and bills to find how much money there is altogether.
- Add dollar and cent amounts correctly using decimals.
- Combine different groups of money and write the total in standard money form (like $3.45).
- Recognize the value of common coins and bills and use them to make a total.

- Count groups of dollar bills to find the total amount of money.
- Add the values of different bill types (ones, fives, tens, twenties) to get one total.
- Use skip-counting by 1s, 5s, 10s, and 20s to count money faster.
- Read and write the total in dollars using the $ sign.

- Count the total value of a group of quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies.
- Skip-count by 25s, 10s, and 5s, then add on pennies to finish the total.
- Check that the total is under a dollar and write it in cents.

- Recognize pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters by what they look like.

- Recognize and name common U.S. coins (penny, nickel, dime, quarter).

- Learn to recognize a penny, nickel, dime, and quarter by name.
- Match a picture of a coin to the correct coin word.
- Notice key features on coins (like size and edge ridges) to tell similar coins apart.
- Use the correct coin names when talking about money.

- Count the total value of a group of coins using quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies.
- Add coin values to find a total amount in cents up to $1.00.
- Trade coins in your head (like 5 pennies for a nickel or 2 nickels for a dime) to make counting easier.
- Write the total amount using the correct cents and dollar notation.

- Figure out how much money you have after adding the next coin in a pattern.
- Skip-count by coin values to find the next amount in a money sequence.
- Recognize how different coins change the total by 1, 5, 10, or 25 cents.