Free Printable Math Worksheets — Number Bonds & Make 10

This page collects free, print-ready math worksheets you can download as PDFs. Each worksheet is designed to work on paper — print it out, pick up a pencil, and go at your own pace. Choose the edition that suits you: standard print for all ages, or large print for anyone who prefers a more comfortable layout.

Whether you are a student building number sense, a teacher looking for a quick classroom handout, a homeschooling parent, or an adult who simply enjoys pencil-and-paper number puzzles, these worksheets are made for you. No sign-up required.

Make 10 Number Bonds Practice worksheet — printable PDF preview showing three exercise sections

Make 10 — Number Bonds Practice

This two-page worksheet covers three exercise types: number bonds to 10 (fill-in-the-blank pairs), circle-the-pairs scanning practice, and a three-number challenge for extra depth. An answer key is included on page two, so you can check your work right away.

PDF · 2 pages · free

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Make 10 Number Bonds Large Print Edition worksheet — printable PDF preview with large text and generous spacing

Make 10 — Number Bonds, Large Print Edition

This worksheet is designed with larger print and fewer problems per page — plenty of white space, bigger blanks, and a comfortable layout that is easy on the eyes. It covers the same number bond exercises as the first sheet, with three sections: fill-in-the-blank pairs, circle-the-pairs, and a match-the-pairs activity. Great for adults and seniors who prefer a relaxed, pen-and-paper number practice without a timer or deadline.

PDF · 2 pages · free

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How Do You Use a Number Bonds Worksheet?

Number bonds are pairs of numbers that add up to a target — on these sheets, the target is always 10. For example, 3 and 7 are a number bond to 10, and so are 6 and 4. As explained in this overview of number bonds, recognizing these pairs is one of the earliest building blocks of arithmetic fluency.

Using the worksheet is straightforward. Print the pages, then work through the fill-in-the-blank section first — write the missing number for each pair. Next, move to the circle-the-pairs exercise and scan each row for combinations that sum to ten. When you finish, flip to page two and check your answers with the key. There is no timer and no pressure. Work at whatever pace feels comfortable, skip a row and come back, or fold the answer key away until you are done. The format works the same way whether you are eight or eighty.

Who Are These Worksheets For?

These sheets are designed for a wide range of people. Students in early grades use them to practice addition facts. Teachers and homeschooling parents grab them as a ready-to-print classroom supplement — no prep beyond clicking download. Older adults and seniors who enjoy pencil-and-paper number activities will find the clean layout and large print-friendly format easy to read. And if you are an adult learner who wants to revisit the fundamentals at your own speed, these worksheets fit that too. One page, a pencil, and you are set.

Prefer to play on screen? Try the Make 10 game — same number bonds idea, no pencil needed.

Want tips on mental math practice? Read our guide: How to Improve Mental Math.

Just for fun — not medical advice.