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Times Tables Flashcards
Pick a table, try the answer in your head, then click the card to flip it. Next and shuffle keep it moving — a gentle, no-pressure way to build recall.
How it works
Flip first, read after. Choose a table below — a card shows a question like "7 × 4". Recall the answer, then click the card to check. Use Next and Shuffle to keep going. Keep scrolling for how flashcards help and answers to common questions. Nothing is stored.
The flashcard drill
Click the card to flip it
Flashcards build recall the gentle way: see a question, retrieve the answer in your head, then flip to check. There are no marks and no clock, which makes them perfect for a warm-up, for a nervous learner, or for a quick pass through a single table.
Key takeaways
- Recall, then check — the act of retrieving is what teaches.
- No marks, no clock — low pressure, great for warming up.
- Shuffle once the table is known, to test real recall.
- One table, twelve cards — a session takes a minute or two.
- No account, no data — the drill runs in the browser.
How to use flashcards well
Pause before you flip
The learning happens in the moment your child tries to remember. Encourage a real attempt — even a whispered guess — before flipping the card. Flipping too quickly turns recall into reading.
Go in order first, then shuffle
A first pass in order helps a child feel the shape of a table. Once that is comfortable, press Shuffle so the facts come out of sequence and have to be recalled on their own.
Keep it short and positive
One or two passes through a table is enough. Stop while it is still going well — short, frequent sessions beat long, tiring ones, and they keep practice feeling friendly.
Frequently asked questions
How do the times tables flashcards work?
Pick a table, and a card shows a question like "7 × 4". Try to recall the answer in your head, then click the card to flip it and check. Press Next for the following card, or Shuffle to mix the order so you cannot predict what comes next.
Why flip cards instead of typing answers?
Flashcards train recall the gentle way: you retrieve the answer in your mind, then check it, with no marks and no pressure. That makes them ideal for a quick warm-up or for a child who finds timed quizzes stressful. When they are ready for scored practice, the practice quiz is the next step.
Should I shuffle the cards?
Yes, once your child knows the table in order. Going through a table in sequence helps at first, but shuffling forces true recall of each fact on its own, rather than riding the rhythm of counting up.
How long should a flashcard session be?
Short and frequent wins. A single pass through a table — twelve cards — takes a minute or two and is plenty. Two or three short sessions a day beat one long one for locking in the facts.
Are the flashcards free, and do we need an account?
They are completely free with no account. Everything runs in your browser, and no personal data is collected.
What comes after flashcards?
Once a child can flip through a table confidently, move to a scored practice quiz, then mix several tables together, and finally try a speed test or a diploma.
Every card shows a mathematical fact (7 × 8 = 56 is exact). The "recall before checking" approach reflects the well-established retrieval-practice principle used in primary-maths teaching; nothing is stored.
Last reviewed 2026-06-28