Finally — One Multiplication Workbook That Goes All the Way to 15.
If you've ever tried to find a single multiplication workbook covering every table from 1×1 all the way through 15×15, you already know how rare it is. Most resources stop at 12×12, leaving families to stitch together multiple workbooks, worksheets, and apps just to cover the full range. This workbook was built to fix that — one focused page a day, every times table from 1 to 15, no gaps.
Why no one makes a complete 1–15 multiplication workbook
Standard multiplication materials were designed around the 12×12 table, so practice for facts beyond 12×12 — let alone a single resource covering the full 1–15 range — can be nearly impossible to find. Yet many students are expected to master multiplication all the way through 15×15. Families using Classical Conversations feel this most acutely: Older CC Foundations students memorize multiplication tables from 1×1 through 15×15, which means the need for complete 1–15 practice is a gap they feel directly. If you've been stitching together separate workbooks to cover the 1s through 15s, this is the resource you've been looking for.
Why Most Multiplication Workbooks Fall Short
| Most Multiplication Workbooks | Nailed It! Math |
|---|---|
| Stop at 12×12 | Covers all tables from 1s through 15s |
| Require multiple books to reach 15×15 | One complete workbook, 1×1 through 15×15 |
| Answer key only in the back of the book | Includes digital, printable, and in-book answer keys |
| Requires constant page flipping while grading | Check answers instantly from your phone |
| Long review sections | One focused page per day |
| Generic practice | Specifically built for the full 1–15 multiplication table range |
As homeschool parents, we designed this workbook around the frustrations we actually experience. Instead of constantly flipping to the back of the book, parents can use the answer key however works best: pull it up on a phone, print a separate grading copy, or use the traditional answer key inside the workbook. It's a small change that saves real time every single day.
How to help your child master every times table from 1 to 15
You don't need a new method — just consistency and a few patterns that make the bigger tables far less intimidating.
Lean on what they already know. Every table from 1 through 15 connects to facts your child has likely already practiced:
- 1s–12s: Build the foundation with the standard tables before introducing the higher facts. Fluency here makes the 13s–15s feel like a natural extension, not a new challenge.
- 13 × n = (10 × n) + (3 × n). So 13 × 7 = 70 + 21 = 91.
- 14 × n = double the 7s. Since 14 is 7 twice, 14 × 7 = (7 × 7) doubled = 49 + 49 = 98.
- 15 × n = (10 × n) plus half of that. Take ten times the number and add half. So 15 × 7 = 70 + 35 = 105.
Keep practice short and daily. Five focused minutes a day beats a marathon session once a week. Spaced repetition is how facts move into long-term memory, which is exactly why a single page a day works so well — whether your child is working on the 3s or the 13s.
Skip-count out loud. Counting by each table — in the car, on a walk — builds fluency from a different angle and breaks up the drilling.
Mix it up once the basics stick. Once your child can recite a table in order, switch to out-of-order and mixed-table problems so they're truly recalling facts, not just reciting a sequence.
Grab your free 13s practice page
Want to start right now? Enter your email and we'll send you a free, printable 13s multiplication practice page — the same clean, no-clutter format we use in our workbooks.
Ready to Master Multiplication from 1 to 15?
Nailed It! Math: Multiplication – Complete 1s Through 15s provides 100 days of focused practice designed to build automatic recall across every times table. Students complete one page per day, gradually strengthening fluency until facts from the 1s all the way through the 15s become second nature.
Parents receive answer keys in three formats:
- •Digital answer key for quick grading from a phone or tablet
- •Printable answer key that can stay beside the parent
- •Traditional answer key included in the workbook
No hunting. No page flipping. No stitching together multiple workbooks.
Buy on AmazonAlready Have the Standard Tables Covered?
This complete 1–15 workbook is ideal if you want everything in one place. If your child has already mastered the 1–12 times tables and only needs focused work on the 13s, 14s, and 15s, we also offer a workbook dedicated entirely to those three tables — so you can target exactly what's missing without repeating work they've already done.
Shop the 13s, 14s & 15s Workbook →From our family to yours
Nailed It! Learning started at our own kitchen table. We're a Classical Conversations family with three kids in Foundations — one of them also in Essentials — and like a lot of CC parents, we kept hitting the same wall: our kids needed to master multiplication through the 15s, but every workbook we found stopped at the 12s. So we built the practice we wished existed. This complete 1–15 workbook is the resource we wanted from day one — everything in a single book, no gaps, no hunting down supplemental materials. Everything we make is the kind of clean, low-prep, open-and-go material we actually want to use with our own children. We're not a big publisher — we're parents in the same season you are.
We're an independent family business and aren't affiliated with or endorsed by Classical Conversations.
Frequently asked questions
Why do Classical Conversations students need multiplication practice all the way to 15×15?
Classical Conversations Foundations students memorize the multiplication tables from 1×1 through 15×15 as part of their math memory work, and that work repeats every cycle — so complete 1–15 practice is a recurring need for CC families, not a one-time event. (We’re an independent resource and aren’t affiliated with Classical Conversations.)
What makes this different from a standard multiplication workbook?
Most multiplication workbooks cover only the 0–12 times tables. This workbook covers the full range from 1×1 through 15×15 — all in one book, with one page of focused practice per day and answer keys in three formats so grading is quick no matter how you prefer to work.
Is this workbook enough on its own, or do I need the 13s, 14s & 15s book too?
This complete workbook covers everything from the 1s through the 15s, so it stands on its own. If your child has already mastered the 1–12 tables and only needs the 13s–15s, our focused 13s, 14s & 15s workbook is a great fit. If you want everything in one place from the start, this is the one.
What's the easiest way to memorize the 15 times table?
Take ten times the number and add half of it. For 15 × 8, that’s 80 + 40 = 120. The "half of ten-times" trick makes the 15s one of the more approachable "hard" tables once students see the pattern.
Is there a trick for the 14 times table?
Yes — the 14s are just the 7s doubled. If your child knows 7 × 9 = 63, then 14 × 9 is simply 63 + 63 = 126. Building on facts they already own makes the bigger tables feel far less overwhelming.
At what age should kids learn all the multiplication tables through 15?
It varies, but children typically tackle the full 1–15 range once they’ve built solid fluency with the 0–12 tables, often around ages 8–11. Mastery of the lower tables matters more than age — if those are solid, the 13s–15s come faster than most families expect.
How long does it take to master multiplication facts from 1 through 15?
With five focused minutes of practice a day, many children build solid recall across the full 1–15 range within a couple of months. Daily consistency matters far more than long sessions — one page a day adds up quickly.
Does this work with curricula other than Classical Conversations?
Yes. It’s program-agnostic practice designed for any mastery-based approach that takes multiplication past the 12s — classical homeschool, Charlotte Mason, traditional school enrichment, or any program expecting fluency through 15×15.
What if my child needs to go beyond 15×15?
Mastery through 15×15 is a strong foundation for any program that expects facts through 20×20. The patterns your child learns in these tables — using doubles, breaking facts into tens and ones, leveraging what they already know — apply directly to the larger tables too.
