Practice Subtraction Within 10
Learn to subtract with pictures, crossing out objects, and simple equations. Perfect for building early math confidence.
Subtraction introduces children to the idea that numbers can decrease. This is a critical shift from counting up to thinking backward. Understanding subtraction in kindergarten makes first grade addition and subtraction much easier.
Our subtraction worksheets use pictures, crossing out objects, and visual models to build understanding. The kindergarten math hub offers more resources for a complete curriculum.
Build understanding with these playful approaches
Give your child 5 blocks, then take away 2. "How many left?" Moving objects away builds concrete understanding of subtraction.
Draw 4 cookies, cross out 1, count the remaining. Pictures help children visualize subtraction before writing equations.
Start at the larger number and count down. For 8-3, say "8...7,6,5." This builds mental math skills for subtraction.
Subtracting with pictures and crossing out objects. Numbers within 5.
Simple equations with pictures and numbers within 10.
Mixed equations within 10 with missing subtrahends. For kindergarten mastery.
For some children, the gap is not in practice — it is in the underlying number sense that makes subtraction make sense. If your child is still counting everything from 1 past mid-year or cannot recognize numbers without counting, worksheets alone will not bridge that gap. Our Number Sense Foundations course (K-2) builds the conceptual groundwork that makes fact fluency stick. You can also browse all available courses and planners on the resources page.
View Number Sense Foundations — $57Everything you need to know about teaching kindergarten subtraction
By the end of kindergarten, students should be able to subtract within 10 using objects, fingers, drawings, or equations. They should understand that subtraction means taking apart and taking from, and they should be able to represent subtraction with pictures and symbols.
Use concrete objects first. Give your child 5 blocks, then take away 2, and ask "how many left?" Use pictures: draw 4 cookies, cross out 1, count the remaining. Always start with objects before moving to written equations.
Take away: "5 cookies, eat 2. How many left?" Comparison: "You have 5 cookies, I have 3. How many more do you have?" Kindergarten focuses on take away. Comparison subtraction comes later.
Subtraction is harder because it requires thinking backward. Use fact families: "5 - 2 = 3" because "2 + 3 = 5." Use objects: show 5 objects, remove 2, count what remains. Practice with small numbers first.
5-8 subtraction problems per day is plenty. Focus on understanding, not speed. Use pictures and objects alongside worksheets. Keep sessions short and playful.
Mastery means your child can: 1) subtract within 10 using objects or pictures, 2) write simple subtraction equations, 3) explain that subtraction means taking away, and 4) use objects to solve subtraction problems.
Generate custom subtraction worksheets for your kindergartner. Choose difficulty, visual supports, and download clean PDFs with answer keys.
Free • No registration required • 10 worksheets per day