This easy worksheet introduces first graders to the four basic coins: pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters. Students complete eight fill-in-the-blank questions naming the value of each coin in cents, then answer five true-or-false statements comparing coin values, like whether a dime is worth more than a nickel.
It is the perfect starting point for learning coin recognition and memorizing each coin's value before adding them.
Style:
Counting Coins
Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct number on each line.
1. A penny is worth 1 cent.
2. A nickel is worth 5 cents.
3. A dime is worth 10 cents.
4. A quarter is worth 25 cents.
5. 2 pennies = 2 cents.
6. 3 nickels = 15 cents.
7. 2 dimes = 20 cents.
8. 5 pennies = 5 cents.
Part B: True or False?
Circle True or False for each statement.
1. A dime is worth more than a nickel.
True False
2. A quarter is worth 5 cents.
True False
3. Two nickels equal one dime.
True False
4. A penny is the smallest coin value.
True False
5. A nickel is worth more than a dime.
True False
Counting Coins
★ Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct number on each line.
1) A penny is worth 1 cent.
2) A nickel is worth 5 cents.
3) A dime is worth 10 cents.
4) A quarter is worth 25 cents.
5) 2 pennies = 2 cents.
6) 3 nickels = 15 cents.
7) 2 dimes = 20 cents.
8) 5 pennies = 5 cents.
★ Part B: True or False?
Circle True or False for each statement.
1) A dime is worth more than a nickel.
True
False
2) A quarter is worth 5 cents.
True
False
3) Two nickels equal one dime.
True
False
4) A penny is the smallest coin value.
True
False
5) A nickel is worth more than a dime.
True
False
Ready to Practice?
Fill in the blanks with the correct coin value, then circle True or False.
13 Questions
15-20 minutes
Auto-graded
Retry anytime
🏆
Questions Correct
0
Correct
0
Incorrect
0
Skipped
0:00
Time
0%
Score
Review Your Answers
See what you got right, missed, or skipped.