Puzzles Starters:
A little lateral thinking might help you solve this puzzle.
Can you write an expression for 100 which uses all the digits 1 to 9?
A challenge to find the number which when written as a word has all the letters in alphabetical order.
This lesson starter requires pupils to find the missing numbers in this partly completed arithmagon puzzle.
Work out the contents and the cost of the Christmas boxes from the given clues.
The classic puzzle of finding a route which crosses each bridge once.
Some keys are missing from this calculator. Just how useful is it?
A Maths Starter activity requiring students to arrange Christmas ornaments in a square box.
Can you use the digits on the left of this clock along with any mathematical operations to equal the digits on the right?
A puzzle about the number of coins on a table given information about fractions of them.
What numbers should be on each face of the two cubes to make this perpetual calendar?
A number placing puzzle which, when solved, raises the notion of proof.
Rearrange the letters in the expression 'Eleven Plus Two' to make another expression with the same value.
Figure out which numbers will complete the sentences in the frame correctly.
Find symmetric words in this ancient cipher.
The numbers on five houses next to each other add up to 70. What are those five numbers?
A little lateral thinking will help you solve this number puzzle.
Work out how many squares are there altogether in the given pattern then tackle the chess board.
How many squares can be found by joining four dots on the grid?
Work out the mathematical words missing from the story about buying a tent.
Change the numbers on the apples so that the number on the lemon is the given total.
Work out what the calculations might be from the letter clues.
Match the fractions to their decimal equivalents and join them with lines that do not cross.
A classic matchstick puzzle designed to challenge your spacial awareness.
A small crossword puzzle containing mathematical words.
Find mathematical words which can be made by using the letters in the name of your school?
Guess the four digit number with help from the clues.
The bottom half of some symmetrical calculations are shown above. Can you work out the answers?
A puzzle about a restaurant bill. Exactly where did the missing pound go?
The missing square puzzle is an optical illusion used to help students reason about geometrical figures.
Work out which team played which from the information given.
Can you recognise the mystery numbers from the clues?
Work out why subtracting a two digit number from its reverse gives a multiple of nine.
Follow the compass directions given in the squares to find where the route starts?
Arrange the digits one to nine to make a correct addition calculation.
This activity requires eight students to sit non consecutively on a grid of chairs.
In how many different ways can the first X and O by placed on the grid?
How many ways can you write an expression for 100 which only uses the same digit repeated and any operations?
Work out the least amount of time for four people to walk through a tunnel?
Can you solve this paradox by agreeing whether the statements are right or wrong?
Five numbers are added together in pairs and the sums shown. What might the five numbers be?
Arrange the numbers so that the totals of the three numbers along any pipe are the same.
A number puzzle suitable for children with a wide range of abilities.
Go around the roundabout performing each of the operations. Which starting point gives the largest answer?
Work out the cheapest way from Los Angeles to Las Vegas by choosing the best route and adding up the given numbers.
Can you draw 4 straight lines, without taking your pencil off the paper, which pass through all 9 roses?
Place a symbol between the four and the five to get a number greater than four and less than five.
Can you find a 14 digit number containing two each of the digits one to seven which obeys the rules given?
Arrange the digits one to nine in the grid so that they obey the row and column headings.
Arrange the numbered trees so that adjacent sums are square numbers.
Separate three rows of three animals using three squares.
What is the sum of the numbers missing from the given Sudoku puzzle?
Interactive number-based logic puzzle similar to those featuring in The Times and Telegraph newspapers.
What are the numbers if their sum equals their product?
Each traffic sign stands for a number. Some of the sums of rows and columns are shown. What numbers might the signs stand for?
Arrange the numbers one to eight into the calculations to make the totals correct..
THOAN stands for 'Think of a number' and there are four randomly generated THOAN puzzles to solve.
Place the numbers on the triangle so that the totals along each of the sides are equal.
A tricky problem set on a coordinate grid.
Work out the phone number from the clues given.
A starter about sums, products, differences, ratios, square and prime numbers.
Create your own mathematical word search for the whole class to enjoy.
Each letter stands for a different digit. Can you make sense of this word sum?
Advanced Puzzles Starters
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Featured Activity
Vinculum
This activity comprises of five challenges each one requiring you to type in one more fraction than the previous challenge and each starting with a different fraction. The starting fractions are one tenth, one quarter, one third, one half and four sevenths.