Factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors

Hover to zoom
Factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors
Factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors

Free printable factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors worksheet for 5th grade students. Part of our factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors factoring collection. Aligned to Common Core standards.

How do I use this worksheet?

Before handing out the worksheet, briefly introduce the concept with a short oral warm-up or a visual model on the board. Encourage students to talk through their thinking as they work: "What strategy are you using? How do you know that is right?" After completing the worksheet, review any missed problems together and discuss the reasoning rather than just the answer. For extra support, let students use manipulatives or draw pictures alongside the written problems. These factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.

What students will practice

  • Students will recognize and apply factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors concepts using grade-appropriate strategies and models.
  • Students will solve problems involving factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors with increasing accuracy and confidence.
  • Students will connect factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors skills to real-world situations and explain their reasoning clearly.


Curriculum Links

Common Core State Standards

Math · 5th Grade

4.OA.B.4
View all 4.OA.B.4 worksheets →

Find this in the curriculum

Browse the grade, subject, and topic this belongs to.

FAQ

How do I use this factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors worksheet?

Before handing out the worksheet, briefly introduce the concept with a short oral warm-up or a visual model on the board. Encourage students to talk through their thinking as they work: "What strategy are you using? How do you know that is right?" After completing the worksheet, review any missed problems together and discuss the reasoning rather than just the answer. For extra support, let students use manipulatives or draw pictures alongside the written problems. These factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.

What does this worksheet teach?

These factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors worksheets for 5th grade give students the structured, hands-on practice they need to build confidence and fluency. Students work through a range of problem formats, from visual models and diagrams to written equations and word problems, so they encounter factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors from every angle. Each worksheet is designed to build on prior knowledge while introducing the level of challenge appropriate for 5th grade. Practicing factor numbers 2-1,000 to prime factors at this stage strengthens the mathematical foundations that support more advanced concepts in later grades.

What grade level is this for?

This worksheet is designed for 5th Grade students (Ages 10-11), aligned to Common Core standard 4.OA.B.4. It can also be used as review for early students at the next grade level or as an introduction for advanced students.

Can I use this for homeschool or classroom?

Yes. This worksheet works for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring settings. Print individual pages for targeted practice, or print the full set as a packet. Works great as a morning warm-up, independent center activity, or fast-finisher task.

What factoring skills do fifth graders learn?

Fifth-grade factoring covers finding factors of a number, identifying prime and composite numbers, writing a number as a product of its prime factors (prime factorization), finding the greatest common factor (GCF) of two numbers, and finding the least common multiple (LCM) of two numbers (CCSS 5.NBT). Prime factorization is performed using factor trees or repeated division by prime numbers, and the result is expressed using exponent notation (for example, 360 equals 2 cubed times 3 squared times 5). The GCF is found by comparing the prime factorizations of two numbers and identifying the common prime factors with their lowest exponents. The LCM is found by taking all prime factors with their highest exponents. GCF and LCM have direct applications: GCF simplifies fractions, and LCM finds the common denominator needed for fraction addition and subtraction. Worksheets that connect factoring to these applications motivate students who struggle to see the purpose of the skill in isolation.

How do you find the greatest common factor of two numbers?

The most reliable method for fifth graders is prime factorization: write the prime factorization of each number, identify the prime factors that appear in both, and multiply those shared factors using the lower exponent. For GCF of 36 and 48: 36 equals 2 squared times 3 squared; 48 equals 2 to the fourth power times 3. Common factors are 2 (with the lower exponent of 2) and 3 (with the lower exponent of 1). GCF equals 2 squared times 3 equals 12. A faster but less generalizable method for small numbers is listing all factors of each number and picking the largest one that appears on both lists. For large numbers or numbers with many factors, prime factorization scales better. The Venn diagram method (write factors of one number in one circle, factors of the other in another circle, and shared factors in the overlap) provides a visual organizer that many students find helpful. Worksheets should include problems at multiple difficulty levels: GCF of small numbers (under 50) for fluency building, and larger numbers (up to 500) for applying the prime-factorization method.

How do fifth graders factor numbers into prime factors?

Factor trees are the standard tool: write the number at the top, then split it into any two factors, keep splitting non-prime factors until all branches end in prime numbers, and circle the primes. For 72: split into 8 times 9; split 8 into 2 times 4; split 4 into 2 times 2; split 9 into 3 times 3. The prime factorization is 2 cubed times 3 squared. Different starting splits always produce the same final answer (this is the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic), which is worth demonstrating: starting with 72 equals 4 times 18 produces the same 2 cubed times 3 squared. Divisibility rules speed up the process: a number is divisible by 2 if it ends in an even digit, by 3 if the sum of its digits is divisible by 3, by 5 if it ends in 0 or 5, by 7 by a slightly more complex rule. Worksheets that ask students to complete partial factor trees before building their own reinforce the procedure. Including a row for writing the final factorization using exponent notation connects factoring to the exponents strand.

Ratings & Reviews

5
5.0

5 reviews

5
100%
4
0%
3
0%
2
0%
1
0%

Reviews are for ClassWeekly members.

Amanda P.

4th Grade Teacher · Verified member

Feb 2026

Been using ClassWeekly for months now. The worksheets are consistent, well-designed, and my students understand them without extra explanation.

Beth C.

Homeschool parent · Verified member

Feb 2026

These have become part of our daily routine. Quick to print, easy to explain, and my daughter feels accomplished when she finishes.

David L.

2nd Grade Teacher · Verified member

Apr 2026

Exactly what I needed for my students. Clean layout, easy instructions, and the kids actually stay on task.

Rachel H.

Homeschool parent · Verified member

Jan 2026

I print these every Sunday for the week ahead. My kids never complain about worksheet time when it's ClassWeekly.

Nicole S.

Homeschool parent · Verified member

Apr 2026

Three kids at home and these work for all of them. Easy to adapt up or down a grade level depending on the day.

Make a Request

Spotted something to fix, or want a worksheet we don't have yet? Tell us and we'll make it.

Worksheet Details

Grade5th Grade
SubjectMath
TopicFactoring
Standard4.OA.B.4
Pages1 page
DifficultyMedium

What is ClassWeekly?

ClassWeekly offers free worksheets and printable learning resources for kids in preschool to grade 5. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards and designed by educators. Become a member to access the full library and download unlimited PDFs.