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Math Worksheets

Even and Odd Numbers Worksheets

Identify and sort even and odd numbers.

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What this tool does

Generate printable even and odd number worksheets. Choose how many numbers and the digit range, and students write E or O beside each number. An optional answer key is included.

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24 numbers · 2-digit · A4

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Practise even and odd numbers

Recognising even and odd numbers is a foundation skill for place value, multiplication, and number patterns. This generator builds printable worksheets of randomly chosen numbers; for each one the student writes E for even or O for odd. You control how many numbers appear and how large they get, so the same tool works for early years counting and for older pupils working with larger numbers.

Every sheet is freshly generated, so you can print a different worksheet for each child or each lesson, and the optional answer key lets anyone mark it quickly.

How even and odd works

A number is even if it ends in 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8 — it can be split into two equal whole groups. A number is odd if it ends in 1, 3, 5, 7, or 9. The rule depends only on the last digit, which is why 1,234 is even and 5,671 is odd. Teaching pupils to glance at the final digit makes the skill fast and reliable even for big numbers.

What you can customise

  • Number of problems — from a short warm-up to a full page.
  • Digit count — 1 to 6 digits to match the year group.
  • Answer key — include a marked copy for fast checking.
  • Name & date — add fields for classroom use.

How to use it

  1. Set the number of problems and the digit range.
  2. Toggle the answer key and Name/Date fields as needed.
  3. Preview the live PDF and press Generate New for a different set.
  4. Download or print — the branded, ready-to-use worksheet prints on A4 or US Letter.

Teaching ideas

Use single-digit sheets for the first introduction, then move to two- and three-digit numbers to show that only the last digit matters. Pair the worksheet with a sorting activity — fold the page and have pupils list evens on one side and odds on the other — or time a one-minute challenge to build fluency.

FAQs

Quick answers

How do you tell if a number is even or odd?

Look at the last digit. If it ends in 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8 the number is even; if it ends in 1, 3, 5, 7, or 9 it is odd. This works no matter how large the number is.

What year group is this for?

Even and odd numbers are usually introduced in Year 1–2 (Grade 1–2). Using larger digit counts extends the same worksheet for older pupils revising the rule with big numbers.

Is there an answer key?

Yes. Toggle the answer key on and the PDF adds a marked copy showing E or O for every number, so marking takes seconds.

Can I make every worksheet different?

Yes. Each generation uses fresh random numbers, so you can print a unique sheet for every pupil. Press Generate New to reshuffle the preview.

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