Bingo ideas / For the classroom

Division Bingo Cards

A quick way to drill division facts without a worksheet. Call a problem like "56 ÷ 8", students find the quotient on their grid, and the first to a full line shows their work to win.

Free to design and print · edit any square · 3×3, 4×4, or 5×5

Division bingo turns fact practice into a game the whole class wants to play: you call a division problem aloud, students solve it and mark the matching answer, and the room stays focused because everyone is racing to the same line. Start from the template and print in minutes.

Because every card is shuffled from the same square list, no two students get the same grid, so nobody can just copy a neighbor and every learner has to solve each problem to find their own answer.

Sample division squares
  • 56 ÷ 8
  • 81 ÷ 9
  • 42 ÷ 7
  • 64 ÷ 8
  • 36 ÷ 6
  • 72 ÷ 9
  • 45 ÷ 5
  • 24 ÷ 4
  • 7
  • 9
  • 6
  • 8
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • Quotient
  • Divisor
  • Dividend
  • Remainder
  • Long division
  • Equal groups
  • Fact family
  • Inverse of ×
  • Skip count

These are just a starting point — swap in your own words in the editor before you print.

Ideas for your game
  • Call the problem, not the answer

    Read out "63 ÷ 9" instead of the quotient so students must actually divide to find the square, turning each call into a real practice rep.

  • Mix facts with vocabulary

    Blend answer squares with terms like quotient, divisor, and remainder so the game reinforces both the math facts and the language of division.

  • Adjust the grid to the level

    Use a 3×3 or 4×4 grid for younger learners so games finish quickly, and a full 5×5 for older students who can handle more facts at once.

Editable and printable

Edit every square. Open the card in the editor, keep the suggested squares or replace them with your own words, emoji, or photos, and pick a theme that fits the day.

Print a whole set at once. Each card is shuffled from the same square list, so every player gets a unique grid. Print to standard letter or A4 paper on any home printer — or order professionally printed cards shipped to your door.

Or play live. Share one link and a QR code and the whole room plays from their phones, in person or over video.

Questions

How do I make division bingo cards for free?

Open the editor, pick the chalkboard theme, keep the suggested quotients and terms or type your own, and print. A basic set is free to make and print.

Can I control which facts appear?

Yes. Every square is editable, so you can focus on dividing by a single number, a fact family, or a full mix depending on what the class is learning.

How do I check student answers?

Ask the winner to read back each problem and quotient on their winning line, which lets the class confirm the math and review any tricky facts together.

How many cards do I need?

One per student. Each card is randomly shuffled from the same square list, so a class of any size can play and still get unique grids.