
| Multiplier | Result |
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Generate a multiplication table for any number – custom range
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Founder & CEO, Toolraxy
Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.
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A multiplication table (also called a times table) shows the product of a base number multiplied by a sequence of multipliers. It’s the foundation of arithmetic, helping students recognize patterns, memorize facts, and build number sense.
Traditional tables stop at 12. This generator lets you go further—up to 1,000 rows—with any starting point. Need the 7 times table from 1 to 20? Done. Want to see 2.5 × 1 through 2.5 × 15? Easy.
Multiplication tables are the building blocks of math. Students who memorize them struggle less with division, fractions, and algebra. But memorization doesn’t work for everyone—and static charts don’t show patterns.
This generator solves both problems:
Customizable – Practice exactly the numbers you need
Pattern recognition – See relationships across any range
Decimal support – Understand multiplication with fractions
Instant – No waiting, no printing, no lost worksheets
Step 1: Enter Your Number
Type the base number you want to multiply. Can be whole or decimal (e.g., 7, 12, 3.5).
Step 2: Set Your Range
Choose the starting multiplier (e.g., 1) and ending multiplier (e.g., 12).
Step 3: View Your Table
The table updates instantly. Each row shows: Base × Multiplier = Product
Step 4: Try Examples
Click “Example (7)” to see the 7 times table from 1–12.
Step 5: Reset
Click “Reset to 5” to return to the classic 5 times table.
Step 6: Adjust as Needed
Change any input—the table regenerates automatically.
The generator loops through every number from your Start to End value. For each multiplier, it calculates:
Product = Base Number × Multiplier
Example with 7 × 1 through 7 × 5:
7 × 1 = 7
7 × 2 = 14
7 × 3 = 21
7 × 4 = 28
7 × 5 = 35
Results are formatted cleanly: whole numbers appear without decimals (7, not 7.00). Decimals show with two places (3.50, not 3.5).
Base: 7
Range: 1 to 12
Result: Complete table showing 7×1 through 7×12
Use: Daily practice until memorized
Base: 2.5
Range: 1 to 10
Result: 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, 15, 17.5, 20, 22.5, 25
Use: Understanding money (quarters) or measurement
Base: 12
Range: 10 to 20
Result: 120 through 240 in steps of 12
Use: Beyond basic tables, preparing for algebra
Fully Customizable – Any number, any range, any time
Decimal Support – Practice with fractions and money
Instant Updates – No “Generate” button needed (but it’s there)
Large Ranges – Up to 1,000 rows for advanced practice
Clean Display – No distracting .00 on whole numbers
Mobile-Friendly – Works on phones, tablets, computers
Completely Free – No signup, no ads, no limits
| User | Why It Helps |
|---|---|
| Elementary Students | Learn and practice times tables |
| Middle Schoolers | Review multiplication facts |
| High School Students | Quick reference for algebra prep |
| Parents | Help with homework, create practice sets |
| Teachers | Generate worksheets on the fly |
| Tutors | Customize practice for each student |
| Adult Learners | Refresh basic math skills |
| Anyone | Quick multiplication reference |
1. Entering Start Greater Than End
If your start number is larger than your end number, the generator adjusts automatically. But for clarity, always put the smaller number first.
2. Forgetting Decimals Work Too
This generator handles decimals perfectly. Use it to practice money (2.5 × 4 = 10.00) or measurements (0.5 × 12 = 6).
3. Making Ranges Too Large
You can go up to 1,000 rows, but that’s a lot of numbers. For learning, smaller ranges (10–20 rows) work better. Use large ranges only when needed.
4. Ignoring Patterns
Look at the results. Notice how each step increases by the base number. That’s the pattern that makes multiplication predictable.
5. Memorizing Without Understanding
Use this tool to see relationships, not just memorize. Ask: “What happens when I multiply by 10?” “How does 7×4 compare to 7×5?”
No Fraction Display – Results show as decimals, not fractions (0.5 not ½)
Maximum 1000 Rows – Prevents browser slowdown for huge ranges
Integer Multipliers Only – Start and end must be whole numbers
No Visual Grouping – Doesn’t show arrays or skip-counting patterns
Text-Based Only – Results in table format, not graphical
Multiplication is repeated addition. 7 × 4 means 7 + 7 + 7 + 7 = 28. Memorizing tables makes this faster, but understanding the pattern is what builds number sense. Students who know their tables spend less mental energy on basic facts and more on complex problem-solving.
Skip counting means counting by a number other than 1. 5, 10, 15, 20 is skip counting by 5. This is exactly what multiplication tables show—just organized in rows. Practice skip counting aloud while looking at the generated table to reinforce both skills.
Commutative: 7 × 4 = 4 × 7 (order doesn’t matter)
Associative: (2 × 3) × 4 = 2 × (3 × 4) (grouping doesn’t matter)
Distributive: 7 × 6 = 7 × (5 + 1) = (7 × 5) + (7 × 1)
These properties help with mental math and algebra.
2.5 × 3 means 2.5 + 2.5 + 2.5 = 7.5. The decimal stays because you’re adding a decimal number. Use this generator to practice—notice how 0.5 × even numbers gives whole numbers, while 0.5 × odd numbers gives .5 endings.
If 7 × 8 = 56, then 56 ÷ 7 = 8 and 56 ÷ 8 = 7. Every multiplication fact is also a division fact. Use the generated table to practice both operations by covering different columns.
Middle school math introduces larger numbers. Knowing 15×6 = 90 saves time when working with fractions, ratios, and algebra. This generator lets you practice any range, preparing students for higher-level math.
Enter the base number you want to multiply, then set the start and end range. The table generates automatically showing each multiplication fact.
Yes. Enter decimals like 2.5 or 3.75 as the base number. The table will show decimal products (e.g., 2.5 × 3 = 7.5).
The generator supports up to 1,000 rows (from start to end). For example, 1 to 1000 works, but 1 to 2000 would be truncated.
The generator removes .00 from whole numbers automatically. If you see .00, it means your base or multiplier produced a non-whole result that rounded to a whole number.
Yes. Enter negative multipliers in the start or end range. The table will show negative products (e.g., 7 × -2 = -14).
A chart shows all facts in a grid. This generator focuses on one base number across a custom range, making it better for targeted practice.
Yes. The generator uses standard multiplication and shows results to two decimal places. Use it to check answers, but always show your work on assignments.
Absolutely. Generate custom tables for worksheets, display them on smartboards, or create differentiated practice for students at different levels.
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