Multiply fractions

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Multiply fractions
Multiply fractions

Free printable multiply fractions worksheet for 5th grade students. Part of our multiply fractions fraction multiplication & division 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 multiply fractions worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.

What students will practice

  • Students will recognize and apply multiply fractions concepts using grade-appropriate strategies and models.
  • Students will solve problems involving multiply fractions with increasing accuracy and confidence.
  • Students will connect multiply fractions skills to real-world situations and explain their reasoning clearly.


Curriculum Links

Common Core State Standards

Number and Operations-Fractions · 5th Grade

5.NF.B.4

Standard: Apply and extend previous understandings of multiplication to multiply a fraction or whole number by a fraction.

View all 5.NF.B.4 worksheets →

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FAQ

How do I use this multiply fractions 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 multiply fractions worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.

What does this worksheet teach?

These multiply fractions 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 multiply fractions from every angle. Each worksheet is designed to build on prior knowledge while introducing the level of challenge appropriate for 5th grade. Practicing multiply fractions 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 5.NF.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 fraction multiplication skills are taught in fifth grade?

Fifth graders learn to multiply fractions by fractions, fractions by whole numbers, and mixed numbers by fractions and by whole numbers (CCSS 5.NF.B.3-6). The standard procedure for fraction multiplication is direct: multiply the numerators, multiply the denominators, and simplify. But the conceptual understanding required is more subtle: multiplying by a fraction less than 1 produces a product smaller than either factor. This reverses the intuition that multiplication always makes things larger, a misconception that causes persistent errors in estimation and reasonableness checking. Visual models (area diagrams where one fraction represents one dimension and the other represents the second) make this concrete: a 1/2 by 3/4 rectangle covers 3/8 of the unit square, confirming that 1/2 times 3/4 equals 3/8. Mixed-number multiplication requires either converting to improper fractions first or using the distributive property (2 and 1/2 times 3 equals 2 times 3 plus 1/2 times 3 equals 7 and 1/2). Worksheets covering each multiplication type separately before combining them let students build fluency at each level.

How do you teach dividing fractions to fifth graders?

Fifth-grade fraction division covers two specific cases: dividing unit fractions by whole numbers and dividing whole numbers by unit fractions (CCSS 5.NF.B.7). Full fraction-by-fraction division is a 6th-grade standard. The conceptual foundation is critical before the algorithm: what does it mean to divide 1/3 by 4? It means splitting one-third into 4 equal parts, each of which is 1/12. And what does it mean to divide 3 by 1/4? It means asking how many one-fourths fit into 3 wholes, which is 12. These two interpretations (partitive and measurement division) map to real situations (sharing and grouping) that students should explore with visual models before learning the multiply-by-the-reciprocal rule. Tape diagrams or fraction bars are effective models. The rule (dividing by a fraction is the same as multiplying by its reciprocal) becomes sensible once students see it derived from the measurement model: how many 1/4-cup servings are in 3 cups? The answer is 3 times 4 equals 12, because there are 4 quarter-cups in each cup. Worksheets that pair each computation with a real-world scenario build this meaning.

How does multiplication change when you multiply by a fraction?

When you multiply by a whole number greater than 1, the product is larger than the original number. When you multiply by 1, the product equals the original. When you multiply by a fraction between 0 and 1, the product is smaller than the original. This is one of the most important ideas in fifth-grade mathematics (CCSS 5.NF.B.5), and it directly challenges the intuition students built in earlier grades. Five-eighths of 24 is 15, which is smaller than 24. One-third of 12 is 4, which is smaller than 12. Why? Because a fraction between 0 and 1 represents a part of the whole, not a multiple of it. Understanding this principle allows students to check the reasonableness of their answers without computing: if I multiply 7 by 3/4, my answer must be less than 7. Worksheets that ask students to predict whether a product will be greater than, less than, or equal to the first factor before computing build this multiplicative reasoning. Number lines that show where the product lands relative to both factors provide a visual check.

Ratings & Reviews

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Reviews are for ClassWeekly members.

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.

Priya N.

Kindergarten Teacher · Verified member

Mar 2026

I love how these are designed for actual classroom use. Margins are good for little hands, font is readable, and activities are just the right length.

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.

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.

Tom B.

Learning Specialist · Verified member

Mar 2026

I recommend these to the families I work with. The clear layout is ideal for students who need reduced visual noise.

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Worksheet Details

Grade5th Grade
SubjectMath
TopicFraction Multiplication & Division
Standard5.NF.B.4
Pages1 page
DifficultyMedium

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