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Free Homeschool Worksheets, Organized the Way Parents Actually Use Them

Browse by grade or by teaching style. Everything is print-ready, free, and built by people who use these worksheets with their own kids.

The internet has, conservatively, ten million free homeschool worksheets on it. Roughly four of them are usable.

That’s not snark — that’s the actual problem we kept running into. You’d find a beautiful set, then realize it cost $24 a pack. Or it was free but designed for a state’s old standards. Or the printable version had a watermark that ate half the page. Or the “free download” turned out to be a sample plus an email signup plus a follow-up sequence trying to sell you a curriculum.

We started building these because our own kids needed them and the existing options were exhausting to wade through.

How This Is Organized

Pick a grade — Pre-K through 8th — and you’ll see what we have for that level, broken out by teaching approach. Or, if you already know your style, jump straight to a framework hub and browse by grade from there. Both paths lead to the same topic pages.

Most topics ship as a 9-week pack. Week 1 is free with no email required. Weeks 2 through 9 follow the same scope-and-sequence and progressively build the skill. You can use just Week 1 as a sampler, run the whole 9-week pack as your spine for that subject, or mix it with whatever curriculum you’re already using.

The Five Teaching Styles

We organize materials around five common homeschool approaches because the same skill can look very different depending on how it’s taught. A kindergartener learning addition might count goldfish crackers (Montessori), narrate a story problem aloud (Charlotte Mason), chant addition facts in a sing-song (Classical), or work with a dyed wool number gnome (Waldorf). The Common Core standard is the same — K.OA.A.1, “represent addition with objects” — but the route there is different.

Common Core (we also call this “standards-aligned”) is what most public schools use. If your kid might re-enter a brick-and-mortar school, or if your state requires standardized testing, this is the safest bet. Honestly, it’s also our most-developed library — it’s where we started.

Charlotte Mason leans on living books, narration, and short focused lessons. Think nature observation pages and copywork passages drawn from real literature, not contrived twaddle.

Classical is grammar-stage memory work — chants, drills, and pattern recognition that builds the mental scaffolding for later abstract thinking.

Waldorf is story-based and artistic. Form drawing, story math, main lesson book pages. We’re early in building this out.

Montessori is hands-on and self-directed. Three-part cards, bead bar work, materials that check themselves. Also early-stage on our end.

What’s Free, What’s Not

Everything labeled “Week 1” or “Sampler” is genuinely free with no email required. Print, use, done. The full 9-week packs and a few specialty bundles are paid downloads — that’s how we keep the lights on and pay the writers — but you can preview each one in full before deciding.

If you only ever use the free Week 1 of every topic for your kid’s whole year, you’d still have something like 80 weeks of material. We’re fine with that.

A Note on the “Coming Soon” Pages

Some grade × framework combinations are still empty. We’re working through them in order of how often people actually search for them, so Common Core coverage is fullest, the alternative frameworks are partial, and Pre-K and the upper grades have gaps. If something you need isn’t here yet, tell us — we genuinely move things up the queue when families ask for them.