Math games for Ages 4–6
Curated for pre-K through first grade. Number sense, arithmetic, fractions, and logic — built into play.
No math games are tagged for Ages 4–6 yet — try a neighboring age band.
Math for four-, five-, and six-year-olds
At ages four to six, math is mostly about counting, recognizing numbers, comparing more vs. less, and beginning to add and subtract within ten. The math games on this page lean heavily on tap-to-count interactions, animated number lines, and short feedback loops where the right answer makes something happy happen on screen. Avoid timed games at this stage; the goal is to make numbers feel friendly, not to build speed.
This page is a tightly filtered slice of our broader Math collection — only the games tagged for Ages 4 to 6 appear above. We size the list to what an adult typically wants when they search for "math games for pre-K through first grade": real titles, real publishers, and a one-click jump straight to play. Pair these picks with offline reinforcement from one of our recommended math workbook publishers when you want practice that carries beyond the screen.
What to expect at this age
The pre-K through first grade band is characterized by pre-reading and very early reading, 10–15 minute sessions of attention, and games that do best with short play windows, lots of audio cues, big buttons, and very little on-screen text. Inside the math collection that translates into a specific kind of game: short enough to fit a single sitting, deep enough to invite a second one, and visually friendly enough that the child wants to come back tomorrow. If a particular game on this page feels too easy or too hard, hop sideways into Math across all ages and pick a neighbor.
How to use this page in a classroom or homeschool
Many teachers and homeschool parents bookmark a single subject-and-age URL like this one and use it as their go-to "indoor recess" or "five-minute filler" tab. Because the URL is stable, anything we add later in the math category for Ages 4–6 automatically appears here — no need to re-share a new link with parents or co-teachers. For longer structured practice on the same skills, families often combine these games with our favorite age-tuned learning libraries for a screen-on/screen-off rotation that still feels like play.
Looking for adjacent subjects?
Many of the best learning sessions for pre-K through first grade students cross-pollinate. After a stretch of math practice, kids often enjoy a quick palette cleanser in another area — the memory and creative arts pages for Ages 4–6 are common follow-ups. You can also browse the full Ages 4 to 6 collection across every subject and genre.