Printable 7 Times Table Chart
The 7 times table — famously the trickiest of them all — laid out in large print from 7 × 1 to 7 × 12, with a blank chart for fill-in practice. The 7s have no ending pattern and no doubling shortcut, which is exactly why a clear reference chart earns its wall space.
How to Use the 7 Times Table Chart
Start by crossing off what is already known: because multiplication works in either order, 7 × 2, 7 × 3, 7 × 4, and 7 × 5 are old friends from earlier tables flipped around. That leaves only a handful of genuinely new facts, and the chart shows how few they are.
Anchor the square: make 7 × 7 = 49 automatic, then reach its neighbors — one more 7 gives 56, one less gives 42. The classic 5-6-7-8 hook (56 = 7 × 8) covers the single most-missed fact in arithmetic. Test the stragglers on the blank chart, then take on the timed 7 times table game.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the 5-6-7-8 trick for the 7 times table?
Read the digits in order — five, six, seven, eight: 56 = 7 × 8. It pins down one of the most-missed multiplication facts with a hook that is almost impossible to forget.
How many 7 times table facts are actually new?
Fewer than most students fear. By the time the 7s arrive, 7 × 2 through 7 × 6 are already known from earlier tables in reverse — commutativity means 7 × 4 is the same as 4 × 7. The genuinely new territory is roughly 7 × 7 through 7 × 12.