Printable 2 Times Table Chart
The 2 times table on one clean page: 2 × 1 through 2 × 12 in large print, with a blank fill-in version for practice. The 2s are the friendliest table to learn first — multiplying by 2 is simply doubling, and every answer is even, ending in 2, 4, 6, 8, or 0.
How to Use the 2 Times Table Chart
Post the filled chart where practice happens and read it aloud together — the skip-counting rhythm of 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 sinks in fast. Because 2 × 7 is just 7 + 7, connect each row to a doubling fact the student already knows from addition; the chart then confirms what they can already work out.
The blank version turns the chart into a self-test: fill in the answers from memory, check against the filled page, and circle anything that needed a pause. When the whole column comes back quickly, move to the timed 2 times table game to build speed.
Frequently Asked Questions
What grade learns the 2 times table?
Most students meet the 2 times table in 2nd grade and are expected to be fluent early in 3rd grade. It usually comes first because doubling is already familiar from addition — 2 × 7 is just 7 + 7.
What is the pattern in the 2 times table?
Every answer is an even number, ending in 2, 4, 6, 8, or 0, and each answer is exactly 2 more than the one before. If an answer is odd, it cannot be in the 2 times table.