place value Worksheets
Free value & place value worksheets with answer key. No login or account needed. From placing commas to identifying place value, visual or word problems we've got you covered. A grading column and quick grade scale maker grading a breeze and a modified pages help with lower level learners or when just introducing a topic. Great for teachers or for homeschool.
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About these worksheets
These worksheets cover place value concepts from kindergarten through fifth grade. Activities include visual place value with base-ten blocks for numbers under 20, using place value to multiply and divide by powers of ten, examining digit values and how they change with position, identifying value and place value of digits in large numbers, marking values on number lines, organizing numbers by place value, converting between standard and expanded forms, and working with place values greater than ten. Resources align with Common Core standards across multiple grade levels.
knbt1

- Look at a picture of blocks and tell what number it shows.
- Tell how many tens and how many ones are in a number under 20.
- Match teen numbers to the idea of one ten plus some ones.
- Write the number that goes with a visual model of tens and ones.
4nbt1

- Multiply a whole number by 10, 100, or 1,000 by shifting digits to the left.
- Divide a whole number by 10, 100, or 1,000 by shifting digits to the right.
5nbt1

- Practice comparing the value of the same digit in two different place-value positions within a number
- Figure out how many times greater or smaller a digit's value is when it moves to a different place
- Express the relationship between two place values as a multiplication (like 10×) or a fraction (like 1/100)
- Work with place values that span both whole numbers and decimals
4nbt1

- Identify the value of a digit based on its place in a whole number.
- Explain how multiplying or dividing by 10 changes a number’s digits and their values.

- Practice identifying which place value a specific digit is in (ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, etc.)
- Find which digit sits in a given place value within a number
- Work with numbers of different sizes, from two digits up to eight digits

- Identify the value of a digit based on its place in a number.
- Use place value to decide which digit is in the ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, or millions place.

- Find what a specific digit is worth based on where it sits in a number.
- Name the place of a digit (ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, and beyond).
- Use place value to tell which digits make the biggest and smallest parts of a number.

- Practice finding which digit is in a specific place value (ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, or ten thousands)
- Read numbers of different sizes — from two digits up to eight digits — and pick out the right digit
- Understand that a digit's position in a number tells you its place value

- Use place value to put three numbers in order from least to greatest or greatest to least.
- Compare three numbers by looking at the highest place first and deciding which is bigger.

- Practice breaking a number into its place value parts and writing it in expanded form.
- Practice turning expanded form back into a standard number.
- Practice renaming a number by trading between place values (like 1 ten = 10 ones) without changing the total.
- Practice using place value to make both sides of an equation equal.

- Find what a digit is really worth based on where it sits in a number.
- Match a digit to its place name (ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, millions).
- Read a multi-digit number and pick out the value of a specific digit.
- Tell the difference between a digit’s face value and its place value.

- Find the value of a digit by looking at its place in the number.
- Tell the difference between a digit and the value it represents in a number.
- Write the value of a digit in standard form (like 300 or 40) based on its position.
4nbt1

- ractice finding the total value of a number when some place-value columns hold a number bigger than 9
- Regroup values that spill over into the next place (like 46 tens becoming 4 hundreds and 6 tens)
- Work with numbers of different sizes, from hundreds up to ten thousands

- Find the value of a specific digit in a number (like knowing the 7 in 3,742 means 700).
- Use place value names to explain what each digit stands for in a whole number.
- Compare digits in different places to see how the same digit can mean different amounts.