Practise counting coins worksheets with real coin and bill pictures — kids count each set and write the total on the line below. Every sheet prints with a matching answer key. All four coins — pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters — counted up to a dollar. Free, no signup.
Opens the builder set to counting coins · 8 money sets · free, no signup.
Now all four coins are in play: penny 1¢, nickel 5¢, dime 10¢, quarter 25¢. Start from the quarters and work down to the pennies, keeping a running total as you go.
Quick way to teach it: Learn the quarter as 25¢ — two quarters make 50¢, four make a dollar. Counting a handful is easiest from the biggest coin down: quarters, dimes, nickels, then pennies.
Learn the quarter as 25¢ — two quarters make 50¢, four make a dollar. Counting a handful is easiest from the biggest coin down: quarters, dimes, nickels, then pennies. Print a fresh sheet, count a few together each day, and check with the answer key — short, regular practice beats one long session.
This is usually taught in Grade 2. Now all four coins are in play: penny 1¢, nickel 5¢, dime 10¢, quarter 25¢. Start from the quarters and work down to the pennies, keeping a running total as you go.
A penny is 1¢, a nickel is 5¢, a dime is 10¢ and a quarter is 25¢. A dime is the smallest coin but worth more than a nickel — value isn't about size. To total a handful, count from the most valuable coin down and keep a running total.
Yes — completely free, no account, no email, no watermark. Every click generates a fresh set of coins and bills with a matching answer key. Print as many as you like.