Hundreds, Tens, and Ones Worksheets for 2nd Grade
Identify the value of digits in hundreds, tens, and ones places.
About Hundreds, Tens, and Ones
Place value is the idea that a digit's value depends on its position within a number. The "3" in 30 is worth ten times more than the "3" in 3. This concept is the backbone of our entire number system and is essential for understanding how multi-digit numbers work.
Extending place value to hundreds is the conceptual leap that unlocks three-digit arithmetic. Students who truly understand that the "3" in 325 means 300 can add and subtract large numbers with far fewer errors.
What Your Child Will Learn
- Identify the hundreds, tens, and ones place in a three-digit number
- State the value of any digit based on its position
- Build three-digit numbers using base-ten blocks
- Decompose a three-digit number in multiple ways (e.g., 345 = 2 hundreds + 14 tens + 5)
- Write a three-digit number given its place-value description
Worksheets by Difficulty
Start with Easy worksheets to build confidence, then progress to Medium and Hard as your student masters each level.
Understanding the Difficulty Levels
Worksheets 1-3 are Easy level — designed to build confidence with simpler numbers and straightforward problem types. Great for introducing the concept or reviewing basics.
Worksheets 4-7 are Medium level — offering a moderate challenge with larger numbers, varied question types, and more problems per worksheet.
Worksheets 8-10 are Hard level — featuring the most challenging problems including multi-step questions, missing values, and real-world applications.
Tips for Parents & Teachers
Use physical bundles: group 10 pennies, straws, or blocks together and call them "one ten." Then show 3 tens and 4 ones to represent 34.
Play "build the number" — say a number and have your child show it with tens and ones using objects or drawings.
When your child sees a two-digit number, ask: "How many tens? How many ones?" until it becomes automatic.
Connect to money: a dime is worth 10 pennies, which is a perfect real-world model of tens and ones.
Frequently Asked Questions
What will my child learn from hundreds, tens, and ones worksheets?
These 2nd Grade hundreds, tens, and ones worksheets help students practice place value, number sense. Each worksheet provides structured practice with clear instructions and varied problem types.
How often should my 2nd Grade student practice hundreds, tens, and ones?
Consistent practice works best. We recommend 10-15 minutes of focused practice 3-4 times per week. Start with Easy worksheets and progress to Medium and Hard as your student builds confidence.
Are these hundreds, tens, and ones worksheets free to print?
Yes, all 2nd Grade hundreds, tens, and ones worksheets on K12Worksheets are completely free. You can download and print as many as you need for home or classroom use — no signup required. Each worksheet includes a printable answer key on a separate page.
How do I know which hundreds, tens, and ones worksheet to start with?
Begin with the Easy worksheets (Worksheets 1–3) to assess your student's current skill level. If they complete these confidently, move to Medium (Worksheets 4–7). Reserve Hard worksheets (Worksheets 8–10) for students who have mastered the basics. If your student struggles with Easy worksheets, revisit prerequisite topics first.