Division Worksheets
Click Generate for 12 division problems. Choose Division Facts for straightforward fact practice, or choose With Remainders for long division problems with room to show your work. Print the worksheet or the answer key. For best results, print from a desktop or laptop.
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Grade-by-Grade Division Progression
Introduction to Division
Introduction to division as equal sharing and grouping. Build fluency with division fact families alongside multiplication.
Division Facts + Remainders
Extend fact fluency through ÷12. Introduce division with remainders and apply division to multi-step word problems.
Long Division Readiness
Strong fact fluency and remainder understanding are the foundation for multi-digit long division, fractions, and ratio work in upper elementary math.
Tips for Parents and Teachers
Start with Division Facts worksheets until students can solve problems automatically. Use divide-by practice for any divisors that still feel shaky.
Introduce the With Remainders worksheet only after exact division facts are fluent. Help students understand what the remainder means in real-world terms — not just as a number to write, but as the "leftover" that doesn't fit into a complete group.
Frequently Asked Questions
What grade levels are these division worksheets for?
The Division Facts worksheet is ideal for Grade 3 and Grade 4 students building basic division fluency. The With Remainders worksheet uses the standard long division bracket format and is typically a Grade 4–5 skill.
What is the difference between the two worksheet options?
Division Facts generates problems with clean, whole-number answers using divisors ÷1–÷12. With Remainders generates non-exact problems in the traditional long division bracket format, with extra space so students can show their work.
Why does the "With Remainders" worksheet use a different format?
The With Remainders option uses the traditional long division bracket — the same format teachers use in classrooms. This format shows the divisor to the left of the bracket and the dividend inside, matching how students are expected to write and solve these problems in school. The answer is expressed as a quotient and remainder (e.g., 4 R5).
Can I print an answer key?
Yes. Click "Print Answer Key" to print the worksheet with all answers filled in. Click "Print Worksheet" to print a blank version for students. The on-screen controls are hidden during printing so only the problems and a Name/Date line appear.
How does practicing these worksheets help with long division?
Strong division fact fluency is the foundation of long division. Students who instantly recall basic facts (like 56÷8=7) spend less mental energy on individual steps during long division, making the entire process easier to learn and execute. Practicing with the bracket format also builds familiarity with the standard written format before moving to multi-digit long division.