Division Practice
Free online division practice for grades 3–4. Choose a mode below to practice targeted divide-by drills, exact facts, or division with remainders.
Choose a Practice Mode
Focus on one divisor at a time.
Practice exact division facts from 1÷1 through 144÷12. Build fast recall for core fact families.
Solve division problems where the quotient is not exact. Build confidence interpreting quotient + remainder.
Grade-by-Grade Progression
Division Facts and Equal Groups
Learn division as sharing and grouping. Build fluency with exact facts and connect each fact to multiplication families.
Division with Remainders
Extend fluency to non-exact division. Interpret quotients and remainders and apply division to multi-step word problems.
Long Division Readiness
Strong fact recall and remainder understanding support long division, fractions, and ratio work in upper elementary math.
Tips for Parents and Teachers
Start with one-divisor practice (like divide by 2, 3, or 4) to build fluency with specific fact families before mixing divisors.
Then practice exact division facts across all fact families. Focused repetition helps students retain facts faster.
After fact fluency, move to division with remainders. Encourage students to explain what the remainder means in context, not just compute it.
Related Practice
Frequently Asked Questions
What grade level is division?
Division is typically introduced in Grade 3 alongside multiplication fact families. Grade 4 continues with larger numbers, remainders, and more complex division strategies.
Should students learn multiplication before division?
Yes. Multiplication and division are inverse operations, and strong multiplication fact fluency makes division much easier. Students usually learn both together, but multiplication facts are the foundation.
What is a remainder in division?
A remainder is what is left over when a number cannot be divided equally into full groups. For example, 29 ÷ 6 = 4 remainder 5, because 6 fits into 29 four times (24) with 5 left.
What is the best order to teach division?
Start by practicing one divisor at a time, then move to exact division facts across all fact families, and finally add mixed division with remainders. This progression builds confidence before introducing extra complexity.
How does this division practice work?
Practice runs continuously with instant right/wrong feedback on every answer. Scores, streaks, and best sessions are saved automatically in your browser.