Are the practice apps free?
Yes. The focused Daily Maths Review practice apps on this page are free web apps for students, teachers and families.
Start with the practice apps teachers and students are most likely to use often.
Use the full directory when you want a specific number, reasoning, data, space or vocabulary app.
Use this lower section when you want more detail about what each practice app covers before opening it.
The four quick-launch practice apps most classes reach for first.
Build addition confidence with fact practice, written addition and quick feedback after each answer.
Use short subtraction practice to strengthen difference, counting back and written subtraction fluency.
Target specific times tables, review multiplication facts and practise the 1 to 12 facts repeatedly.
Practise whole-number division facts and connect division to the inverse of familiar times-table facts.
High-demand topics that usually need repeated short practice.
Use visual and symbolic fraction questions to practise denominators, common fraction sets and recognition.
Practise o'clock, half past, quarter past, quarter to, minute times and matching analogue to digital clocks.
Work with coins and notes through totals, change, missing amounts and practical shopping-style questions.
Review whole number and decimal place value through digit values, partitioning, MAB models and place value houses.
Practise skip counting, number patterns, missing terms and continuing sequences from different starting points.
Choose from measurement questions covering rulers, units, conversions, area, perimeter, volume, mass and capacity.
Number sense, comparison, rounding, clues, problems and strategy practice.
Work on missing labels, placing numbers and reading whole number, fraction and decimal number lines.
Compare values, order numbers and make larger or smaller numbers from a set of digits.
Review rounding places and use estimation with sums and money totals.
Use quick questions to review core number properties and vocabulary around factors and multiples.
Use clue-based reasoning to combine place value, doubles, halves, operations and number facts.
Practise reading a maths story, deciding the operation and checking the answer against a worked explanation.
Practise split strategy, count on, number line, levelling, compensation and bridging strategies.
Calendar, graph, chance and geometry apps for targeted follow-up.
Answer calendar questions about dates, weekdays, elapsed days and counting across a calendar month.
Read values from graph and data displays, compare categories, find totals and identify most or least.
Review likely, unlikely, certain and impossible events, plus simple probability from visual situations.
Use array-like visuals to identify rows and columns before moving into multiplication and spatial language.
Review common quadrilateral names and identify them from shape visuals.
Identify 3D objects, count their features and connect solids to simple object nets.
Use coordinate grids to identify ordered pairs, plot points and practise x/y axis language.
Review right angles, angle comparisons and core angle language with quick visual questions.
Helpful tools for specific support, terminology and visual models.
Use a simple calculator interface to practise the four operations and check calculator entry habits.
Model division by sharing counters into equal groups and matching the visual model to the numbers.
Strengthen maths vocabulary by matching common words and symbols to their meanings.
Daily Maths Review practice apps are free web activities for quick classroom, student and home revision. Teachers planning a lesson can also read the addition app guide, the subtraction app guide, the multiplication app guide, the division app guide or the place value practice app guide.
Yes. The focused Daily Maths Review practice apps on this page are free web apps for students, teachers and families.
Students can practise place value, number lines, operations, times tables, fractions, measurement, time, money, graphs, chance, geometry, word problems, number properties and maths vocabulary.
Yes. Teachers can open the practice apps to model a skill, preview student activities, choose targeted practice or support a whole-class review.