ClassWeekly Review: Is a ClassWeekly Subscription Worth It?
Key Takeaways
- ClassWeekly is a printable worksheet library for PreK through 5th grade, covering Math, Reading, Writing, and Grammar.
- A 30-day free trial gives you full access with no charge upfront. You only pay if you decide to stay.
- The annual plan works out to $5 per month, which covers unlimited worksheet downloads for the whole year.
- Every worksheet is designed for real classroom use: clean layouts, clear instructions, and age-appropriate progression.
- The library is organized by grade, subject, topic, and subtopic so you land exactly where you need to be.

ClassWeekly Review: Is a ClassWeekly Subscription Worth It?
If you've landed here, you're probably wondering the same thing a lot of teachers and parents wonder before signing up anywhere: is this actually worth my time and money?
Fair question. There are dozens of worksheet sites out there, and they mostly look the same at first glance. So here's an honest, detailed look at what ClassWeekly is, what it costs, and whether it's the right fit for you.
We'll answer the questions we hear most often. Read on.
What is ClassWeekly?
ClassWeekly is an online worksheet library where teachers and parents can browse, preview, and download printable worksheets for kids in PreK through 5th grade.
The four subjects covered are Math, Reading, Writing, and Grammar, and the content is designed specifically for early learners (ages 4 to 11). That means simple layouts, clear instructions kids can follow, and activities that connect to real classroom skills, not generic filler exercises that could apply to any grade.
How does ClassWeekly work?
You browse the worksheet library by grade, subject, and topic. Each worksheet has a clear preview so you know exactly what you're getting before you download it. No surprises when you hit print.
Here's what a typical session looks like:
- You're prepping for next week and need extra practice on two-digit addition without regrouping for your 1st graders.
- You search for that exact skill, see the worksheet, preview it, and download it.
- You print it, and it looks exactly as expected.
That's it. No hunting across five different sites. No reformatting PDFs that don't print right. No paying per download.
Every worksheet in the library is standards-aligned and designed for real classroom use. The layouts are intentionally simple: no visual clutter, clean instructions, and enough white space for younger kids to actually write in their answers.
Free Addition Worksheets for 1st Grade
What subjects and grades does ClassWeekly cover?
ClassWeekly covers four core subjects across PreK through 5th grade:
- Math: Number sense, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, geometry, measurement, and more.
- Reading: Phonics, sight words, reading comprehension, vocabulary, and fluency.
- Writing: Handwriting, sentence structure, creative writing prompts, and grammar in context.
- Grammar: Parts of speech, punctuation, capitalization, and sentence editing.
Every subject is organized by grade level, then by topic, then by subtopic. So if you need 3rd grade reading comprehension exercises, you're not scrolling through results for every grade at once. You land exactly where you need to be.
For teachers covering multiple grades, you can switch between grade levels freely. Everything is organized the same way across every subject, so once you learn the layout for one grade, you know how it works for all of them.
How much does ClassWeekly cost?
Here's how pricing works:
30-Day Free Trial - $0 for 30 days Full library access, unlimited downloads. Card required at signup.
Annual - $5/month (billed as $60 for the first year) Unlimited downloads all year. Best value.
Monthly - $14/month Unlimited downloads, cancel anytime.
A few things worth knowing:
The free trial is the full product, not a limited preview. You get complete access to every worksheet in the library for 30 days. No watermarks, no download caps. If you cancel before the trial ends, you pay nothing.
The annual plan is $5 per month. That's the first-year price, billed as $60 upfront. For comparison, a single resource pack on Teachers Pay Teachers often costs more than that. Here, $60 covers unlimited downloads for twelve months.
The monthly plan ($14/month) is there if you don't want a yearly commitment. It's month-to-month with no lock-in. Some teachers use it for specific stretches of the year, like the weeks before standardized testing when they're printing the most.
You can start your free trial at classweekly.com. No charges for 30 days, and a reminder email goes out 7 days before your trial ends so there are no surprises.
What makes ClassWeekly different?
We hear this version of the question a lot: "There are so many worksheet sites. Why ClassWeekly?"
A few reasons:
Everything is designed for PreK through 5th grade. We're not trying to cover high school chemistry and kindergarten phonics in the same library. Early education is all we do. That focus means every worksheet is actually appropriate for the age range it's labeled for, not just re-tagged content that was built for something else.
Previews are clear, not blurred. Before you download anything, you can see exactly what the worksheet looks like. We don't make you subscribe first just to find out the layout doesn't work for your students.
The library is organized the way teachers think. By grade, then subject, then topic, then subtopic. It matches the mental model teachers already have from their curriculum maps. You don't have to learn a new system just to find a worksheet.
No per-download charges. One subscription covers everything in the library. Print as much or as little as you need.
What do teachers and parents say?
Over 100,000 educators and parents use ClassWeekly. Here's what comes up most often in feedback:
- The worksheets print cleanly. No wasted ink, no cut-off margins, no scrambled formatting.
- The skill progression makes sense. Activities build on each other in a way that matches how kids actually learn.
- Finding the right worksheet takes a minute, not an hour.
- The 30-day trial is long enough to actually evaluate whether the library fits your teaching style.
The most common request we hear? More subjects. Science and Social Studies are on the roadmap.
Two things that come up a lot in feedback, and that teachers find genuinely useful beyond worksheets:
The Teaching Wiki is a free 335-entry glossary of PreK-5 teaching terms, organized A-Z by subject. If a student asks what a "common noun" is, or you want a quick reference for what "subitizing" means before a lesson, it's right there.
The school calendar maps out the academic year so you can plan ahead, see what's coming, and pull the right worksheets at the right time.
Is a ClassWeekly subscription worth it?
Honestly? For most teachers and parents who are regularly searching for printable practice materials, yes.
Here's the math: at $5 per month on the annual plan, you're paying $60 for a year of unlimited access. If you're currently spending time hunting across multiple sites, downloading mismatched PDFs, or paying per resource on marketplaces, the subscription pays for itself quickly, in both time and money.
The 30-day free trial removes the risk entirely. You have a full month to explore the library and decide if it fits your routine. If it doesn't, you cancel and pay nothing.
The teachers and parents who get the most out of ClassWeekly are the ones who use it consistently: weekly worksheet practice, targeted review before assessments, and supplemental work that matches exactly what kids are learning in school. If that sounds like you, you'll find it worth it.
Start your free 30-day trial at classweekly.com. No charges until the trial ends, and you can cancel anytime.
We'd love to be your go-to resource for the rest of the school year and beyond. 😊

Adi Ackerman
Head Teacher
Adi is the Head Teacher at ClassWeekly, with years of experience teaching elementary students. She designs our curriculum-aligned worksheets and writes practical guides for teachers and parents.

