Free printables

Free Printable Worksheets for Kids

Every worksheet maker and printable pack on My Turn to Read, in one place. Handwriting, cursive, name tracing, alphabet, and letter practice — all free, all print-ready, no sign-up required.

  • Type any text — letters, names, sentences
  • Print or cursive styles
  • Proper 3-line handwriting guides
  • Adjustable letter size and repeats
  • US Letter and A4 friendly
  • Free · No sign-up · No watermarks

Why handwriting practice belongs in every reading routine

Writing a letter by hand activates the same brain circuits a child uses to read that letter. That's why kids who trace and write letters learn to recognize them faster than kids who only tap them on a screen. A few minutes of daily handwriting practice quietly builds letter recognition, spelling, and reading fluency — all at once.

How to use these worksheets

  1. Pick a tool above that matches what your child is working on.
  2. Open the generator and adjust the letters, size, or number of trace copies.
  3. Click Print worksheet. That's it — no sign-up, no download.
  4. Keep sessions short (5–10 minutes) and daily rather than long and occasional.

Frequently asked questions

Are all of these worksheets really free?

Yes. Every generator and printable on this page is free to use — no sign-up, no watermarks, no limits on how many pages you print.

What's the difference between a generator and a printable?

Generators let you type your own text (a name, a word list, a sentence) and adjust size and style before printing. Printables are ready-made pages built on top of the generator with the most useful presets already loaded.

Do these worksheets work for homeschool and classroom use?

Yes — parents, homeschool teachers, and classroom teachers use these daily. Print as many copies as you need for your students or your own children.

Print or cursive — which should we start with?

Start with print. It matches the letters children see in books, so print handwriting practice doubles as reading practice. Move on to cursive once print letter formation is confident, usually around age 7–8.