Volume and capacity word problems


Free printable volume and capacity word problems worksheet for 5th grade students. Part of our volume and capacity word problems word problems 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 volume and capacity word problems worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.
What students will practice
- Students will recognize and apply volume and capacity word problems concepts using grade-appropriate strategies and models.
- Students will solve problems involving volume and capacity word problems with increasing accuracy and confidence.
- Students will connect volume and capacity word problems skills to real-world situations and explain their reasoning clearly.
Curriculum Links
Common Core State Standards
Math · 5th Grade
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FAQ
How do I use this volume and capacity word problems 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 volume and capacity word problems worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.
What does this worksheet teach?⌄
These volume and capacity word problems 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 volume and capacity word problems from every angle. Each worksheet is designed to build on prior knowledge while introducing the level of challenge appropriate for 5th grade. Practicing volume and capacity word problems 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.MD.A.1. 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.
How do fifth graders approach multi-step word problems?⌄
Multi-step word problems require selecting the correct operations, ordering them, and keeping intermediate results organized (CCSS 5.OA, 5.NBT, 5.NF, 5.MD). A reliable problem-solving framework is: (1) read the problem and identify what is being asked, (2) identify the given information and what is missing, (3) determine what operations are needed and in what order, (4) compute each step, and (5) check whether the final answer is reasonable in the context of the problem. The Read-Draw-Write strategy (read the problem, draw a visual representation, write the equation) is widely used in elementary classrooms. Common errors include performing the right operations in the wrong order, using all numbers in the problem without assessing which are relevant (some word problems include extraneous information), and forgetting the unit in the final answer. Worksheets that present multi-step problems with workspace organized into labeled steps (what I know, what I need to find, my work, my answer) scaffold the organization without reducing the mathematical demand.
What strategies help fifth graders solve fraction word problems?⌄
Fraction word problems are among the most challenging at the fifth-grade level because they combine reading comprehension, fraction computation, and contextual interpretation. Two visual strategies are particularly effective: tape diagrams (also called bar models) and fraction circles. A tape diagram for a problem like Sarah had 3/4 of a pizza and ate 1/3 of what she had shows the 3/4 divided into thirds, making 1/3 of 3/4 equal to 1/4 visible and concrete. Key vocabulary that determines the operation: of means multiply (1/3 of 3/4), split between or shared equally means divide, and how much more means subtract. Students frequently confuse the whole (the reference unit) in problems where the whole changes: giving away 2/5 of a 30-item collection leaves 18 items, but now those 18 items are the new whole for any subsequent fractions. Worksheets that explicitly label the whole in each step of a solution model, and that include both one-step and two-step fraction problems, build the flexibility to handle changing wholes.
How do you teach fifth graders to check their word problem answers?⌄
Answer-checking strategies work only if students have estimated before computing, so estimation must be a required step rather than an afterthought. For computation with whole numbers, round all values to the leading digit and compute mentally: a problem involving 47 and 23 should give an answer near 50 times 20 equals 1000 for multiplication or near 50 minus 20 equals 30 for subtraction. For fractions, use benchmark fractions: 5/8 is close to 1/2, so 5/8 of 40 should be close to 20. For measurement conversions, check whether the answer is in larger or smaller units and whether it should therefore be a bigger or smaller number. A qualitative reasonableness check: re-read the question and ask whether the answer makes sense in real life. The price of one apple cannot be $147; the length of a classroom cannot be 3 miles. Worksheets that include a required reasonableness box (is this answer reasonable? explain why) build the checking habit rather than leaving it as optional. Students who skip estimation consistently miss errors that an estimate would immediately flag.
Ratings & Reviews
55 reviews
Reviews are for ClassWeekly members.
Priya N.
Kindergarten Teacher · Verified member
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.
David L.
2nd Grade Teacher · Verified member
Exactly what I needed for my students. Clean layout, easy instructions, and the kids actually stay on task.
Tom B.
Learning Specialist · Verified member
I recommend these to the families I work with. The clear layout is ideal for students who need reduced visual noise.
Beth C.
Homeschool parent · Verified member
These have become part of our daily routine. Quick to print, easy to explain, and my daughter feels accomplished when she finishes.
Emily W.
Homeschool parent · Verified member
We've tried a lot of printable worksheets but these are consistently the best quality. My son asks to do them.
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Worksheet Details
| Grade | 5th Grade |
| Subject | Math |
| Topic | Word Problems |
| Standard | 5.MD.A.1 |
| Pages | 1 page |
| Difficulty | Medium |
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