Grade 7 Multiplication Worksheets
Free printable multiplication practice for Grade 7 students. Generate problems, solve them on screen or paper, and download as PDF.
What Your Child Will Learn
In Grade 7, multiplication includes integers (positive and negative numbers) and more complex fraction and decimal operations. Students learn the rules for multiplying negative numbers and apply multiplication to proportional reasoning, scale factors, and percent problems.
Algebraic thinking emerges as students multiply variables and simplify expressions like 3x × 4. Multiplication is central to calculating areas of complex shapes, understanding rates of change, and working with probability.
Skills Covered
- Multiplying positive and negative integers
- Multiplying fractions and mixed numbers fluently
- Using multiplication in proportional reasoning
- Multiplying algebraic terms
- Scale factor calculations
- Percent increase and decrease using multiplication
Curriculum Aligned: Aligned with Strand B (Number): extending operations to integers and applying multiplicative reasoning.
Parent Tip: The integer rules are simple: positive × positive = positive, negative × negative = positive, and mixed signs = negative. Practice with real contexts like temperature changes.
What your child will practice
- Operations with Rational NumbersAdd, subtract, multiply, and divide rational numbers.
- Operations with FractionsMultiply and divide fractions and mixed numbers.
Free Practice Worksheets
Print, solve on paper, then upload a photo for instant AI grading and feedback.
Build confidence with approachable problems
Solve each problem. Take your time.
- 1.Multiply: 12 * 15
- 2.Multiply: 2.5 * 3.1
- 3.Multiply: -7 * 8
- 4.Multiply: -5 * -9
- 5.Multiply: 3/4 * 8/9
- 6.Multiply: 1/2 * 2 1/3
Full range of grade expectations
Solve each problem. Show your work.
- 1.Calculate the product: 3/4 * 2/5
- 2.A recipe calls for 2.5 cups of flour. If you want to make 3 times the recipe, how many cups of flour do you need?
- 3.Simplify the expression: -7 * (-4)
- 4.A rectangular garden has a length of 15.2 meters and a width of 8.5 meters. What is the area of the garden? (Area = length × width)
- 5.Compare the following two expressions and state which is greater: 5/6 * 9/10 OR 1/2 * 3/4
- 6.A map has a scale where 1 inch represents 50 miles. If two cities are 3.5 inches apart on the map, what is the actual distance between the cities?
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Create a Free AccountFrequently Asked Questions
What order should my child learn the times tables?
Start with 2s, 5s, and 10s (easiest patterns), then 3s, 4s, and 9s. Leave 6s, 7s, and 8s for last -- by then most facts are already covered by the commutative property.
When should my child know their multiplication facts?
Most curricula expect multiplication fact fluency (up to 12x12) by the end of Grade 4. Regular short daily practice sessions of 5-10 minutes are more effective than long weekly drills.
Are timed multiplication tests helpful?
Timed tests build fluency but can cause math anxiety in some children. Balance timed practice with untimed problem-solving, games, and real-world multiplication scenarios.