Handwriting Worksheets for Kids — Free Printable
Good handwriting habits are most easily established in the early grades when motor pathways are still forming. These worksheets give children a clear model to follow, guide lines to anchor their letters, and blank rows for independent practice — the three elements research identifies as most effective for handwriting instruction.
Use the free generator to make a customised worksheet in under a minute: type the words you want to practise, choose your style and guide lines, and print.
Grade-by-grade recommendations
Kindergarten
Focus on uppercase letters first, using Extra large letter height (approximately 1 inch / 2.5 cm). Use dotted trace mode so children can stay within the model. Practise pre-writing shapes and name letters before moving to full alphabet tracing. See our kindergarten-specific page for a structured sequence.
Grade 1
Introduce lowercase letters alongside their uppercase partners. Use Large size (approximately ¾ inch / 1.9 cm). Begin sight-word practice once 15–20 letters are stable. Move to 3 or 4 blank practice rows per line.
Grade 2
Full alphabet, upper and lower case, in print. Begin cursive introduction if your curriculum calls for it (see cursive practice sheets). Introduce two-word and short-sentence practice.
Grades 3–5
Transition to Medium size (approximately ½ inch / 1.3 cm) to match notebook paper in these grades. Focus on fluency and consistency: words per minute is the key metric (aim for 20–25 wpm by end of grade 3, 40+ wpm by grade 5 for legible cursive). Sight words, vocabulary lists, and copying sentences from reading are all good content sources.
Pencil, paper, and posture basics
- Pencil: standard No. 2 (HB) pencil with a good eraser; triangular barrel grips can help early learners hold correctly
- Paper angle: tilt the paper 20–35° for right-handers, opposite direction for left-handers
- Posture: both feet flat on floor, non-writing hand anchors the paper
- Desk height: elbows should be at or slightly above desk height when seated
Related resources
- Handwriting Practice Sheet Generator
- Letter Tracing Worksheets
- Kindergarten Handwriting Worksheets
- Cursive Practice Sheets
- Adult Handwriting Worksheets
Frequently Asked Questions
High-frequency sight words are ideal because children encounter them in reading. Common first lists include: the, and, a, to, in, is, it, that, was, I, for, on, are, at, be. Use our generator to type a row of sight words and print a dedicated practice sheet for each word family.
Let children choose the practice words — names of pets, favourite foods, or characters from books. Our generator accepts any text, so personal words create natural motivation. Short daily sessions (5–10 minutes) are more effective than long infrequent sessions for motor-skill development.
The dynamic tripod grip (thumb and index finger pinching the pencil, middle finger underneath for support) is the most widely taught. The lateral tripod (similar but with the pencil resting on the ring finger) is also accepted. Handwriting Without Tears and occupational therapists both confirm that any stable functional grip is acceptable — the goal is control and comfort, not a specific finger position.
The generator creates a standard US Letter (8.5 × 11 in / 216 × 279 mm) layout. When printing, make sure your browser print settings are set to "Fit to page" with no additional scaling to preserve the intended line heights.