Timed Math Game
Answer as many as you can before the clock runs out — with instant feedback on every answer. Set your operations, difficulty, and time limit in game settings.
20 questions · 60 seconds · Medium
Tap an answer, or use the A · S · D · F keys.
How the Math Minute Game Works
Math Minute is a free timed math game that builds fact fluency through short, focused practice. Pick your operations, difficulty, and time limit, then answer as many multiple-choice questions as you can before the clock runs out. Every answer gives instant feedback, and the results screen shows your full list — with the correct answer for anything you missed.
Make it your own in game settings: practice addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division with whole numbers, or step up to fractions, decimals, and exponents. Set the number of questions, choose Easy, Medium, or Hard, and race your own countdown — or switch the timer off entirely for untimed practice. Play with a tap, or use the A / S / D / F keys.
It makes a great daily warm-up for grades 1–8, whether you're a student building speed, a teacher running a bell-ringer, or a parent practicing at home. Prefer paper? Build a custom worksheet or browse the worksheet library — each with a full answer key. Want step-by-step explanations first? Read the free math guides.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Math Minute free to play?
Yes — the timed math game is completely free, with no account or sign-up required. Just choose your settings and press Start.
What kinds of math can I practice?
Addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division with whole numbers, plus fractions, decimals, and exponents. Practice one operation at a time or mix several in a single round.
Can I turn off the timer?
Yes. The timer is optional — turn it off in game settings for relaxed, untimed practice, or set your own time limit when you want to race the clock.
What grade levels is the game for?
It is designed for grades 1 through 8. Start with single-digit facts on Easy and work up to larger numbers, fractions, decimals, and exponents on Hard — so the same game grows with the student.