Printable 8 Times Table Chart
The 8 times table from 8 × 1 to 8 × 12 in large print, with a blank fill-in chart alongside. Multiplying by 8 is doubling three times — and the answers march backwards through the even endings: 8, 6, 4, 2, 0, then around again.
How to Use the 8 Times Table Chart
Pair the chart with the triple-double route: for 8 × 6, double 6 to 12, double to 24, double to 48 — then find the row to confirm. The 10s route works too: 8 × 7 is 70 minus 14, which is 56. Practicing a strategy against the chart builds recall with understanding.
For 8 × 8, use the rhyme almost every student remembers: "I ate and ate and fell on the floor — 8 times 8 is 64." Fill the blank chart from memory, circle the slow rows, and finish with the timed 8 times table game.
Frequently Asked Questions
What pattern do the ones digits follow in the 8 times table?
They run backwards through the even digits: 8, 16, 24, 32, 40 end in 8, 6, 4, 2, 0 — and then the cycle repeats for 48 through 80. Every answer is even, so an odd answer is always wrong.
How does doubling help with the 8 times table?
Since 8 = 2 × 2 × 2, multiplying by 8 is doubling three times: 8 × 6 is 6 → 12 → 24 → 48. It gives students a reliable route to any 8s fact while the facts are still settling into memory.