Printable 12 Times Table Chart
The 12 times table — the table of dozens — from 12 × 1 to 12 × 12 in large print, with a blank fill-in chart. Eggs, months, and inches all come in twelves, and the table itself splits cleanly: 12 × n is 10 × n plus 2 × n, the 10s and 2s working together.
How to Use the 12 Times Table Chart
Teach the split alongside the chart: for 12 × 7, take 70, add 14, land on 84 — then find the row to confirm. Splitting by place value is faster than rote memory and quietly previews the standard multiplication algorithm students meet next.
Anchor facts to real dozens — 12 × 3 is three cartons of eggs, 36 — and make 12 × 12 = 144 a milestone: it is the final fact of the classic tables. Fill the blank chart from memory, then close it out with the timed 12 times table game.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the easiest way to work out 12 times table facts?
Split 12 into 10 + 2: 12 × 7 is 70 + 14 = 84, and 12 × 9 is 90 + 18 = 108. The two pieces always come from easy tables, and adding them takes seconds.
What real-world things come in twelves?
Dozens are everywhere: 12 eggs in a carton, 12 months in a year, 12 inches in a foot, 12 hours on a clock face. That is why the 12s stay useful long after school — and why most curricula still teach the tables through 12 × 12.