4th Grade Fractions

4th Grade Fractions

4th Grade Fractions Practice

These worksheets help 4th graders master fundamental fraction skills through colorful, dessert-themed activities. Students will practice adding fractions with like denominators, working with mixed numbers, and learning to regroup when sums exceed one whole. The collection includes visual fraction models using pie charts and number lines to build conceptual understanding of equivalent fractions.

Beyond basic computation, students tackle real-world word problems involving baking scenarios, compare fractions using greater than/less than symbols, and convert between mixed numbers and improper fractions.

Each worksheet comes with a complete answer key and covers Common Core standards for 4th grade fraction instruction. The variety of problem types ensures students develop both procedural fluency and deeper conceptual understanding of fractions.

Resource Details

  • Age(s): 9
  • Grade(s): 4th Grade
  • 24 Printable PDF Resources
  • Includes Answer Key(s)

Fractions Worksheets (Printable PDFs)

Shade the same amount of cake on both cakes in each pair, even if they are sliced differently.

Fill in the missing fractions on each set of number lines.

Draw a line to match each fraction on the left with its equivalent fraction on the right.

Use your knowledge of multiplication to fill in the missing number that makes each set of fractions equivalent.

Write the fractions shown, then use >, <, or = to compare them.

Use what you know about the size and context to compare the amounts.

Add or subtract fractions to figure out who ate more, what's left, or how much was shared.

Rewrite the fractions from least to greatest.

Decide if each statement is true or false.

Add each pair of fractions. All have the same denominators.

Subtract the fractions. All problems have like denominators.

Use what you know about equivalent fractions and comparing to solve each problem.

"Flip" each mixed number into its improper fraction so you can measure correctly.

Convert these fractions into mixed numbers.

Draw a line to match each mixed number to its improper fraction.

Add each pair of mixed fractions. All have the same denominators.

Subtract each pair of mixed fractions. All have the same denominators.

Sometimes fractions add up to more than one whole. That's when we regroup. Add the mixed numbers and rename any improper fractions.

Sometimes we need to take away more than we have in the fraction part, and we must regroup from the whole number.

Solve each mixed addition and subtraction problem with regrouping.

Read each problem, spot the error, and rewrite it the right way.

Decide if each statement is true or false.

Use what you know about mixed numbers to solve each word problem.

Write your own dessert recipe using at least 4 mixed numbers. Then create 2 addition and 2 subtraction problems based on your recipe for a classmate to solve.