How to Learn Addition up to 20 ➕
Addition up to 20 is a key milestone in first grade. When a child can add calmly and accurately in this range, later topics — carry, two-digit numbers, and early multiplication — become much easier. This guide shows a practical order of learning, useful strategies, and how to practice without stress using free tools on IloveMath.
Why addition up to 20 matters
Many school tasks assume children can bridge through 10 (for example 8 + 5). Without that skill, children count on fingers for every problem, get tired, and start to believe they are bad at math.
Strong addition up to 20 also supports subtraction (because 13 − 5 is related to 8 + 5) and mental math in shopping, games, and sports. It is worth building carefully rather than rushing.
Is your child ready?
Before focusing on sums up to 20, check these basics:
- Recognizes and writes numbers to 20
- Adds reliably up to 10 (for example 6 + 3 without long counting every time)
- Understands that addition means putting groups together
If these are shaky, start with the Numbers up to 10 / Addition up to 10 lessons and the addition table on a slow setting. Do not skip ahead to timed quizzes yet.
A clear learning sequence
Use this order for one to two weeks per stage, depending on the child:
- Review bonds to 10 (1+9, 2+8, 3+7…)
- Add a single-digit number to 10 (10+4, 10+7)
- Bridge through 10 (8+5 = 8+2+3)
- Doubles and near-doubles (6+6, 6+7)
- Mixed practice up to 20, then light speed work
Stay on a stage until answers are mostly correct in a calm setting. Speed is the last step, not the first.
Strategies that actually help
Teach one strategy at a time and name it aloud:
- Count on from the larger number (for 3+8, start at 8 and count 3)
- Make ten (8+5 → take 2 from 5 to make 10, then add 3)
- Use doubles you already know (7+8 = 7+7+1)
- Check with objects or drawings when stuck — then return to numbers
If a child only memorizes answers with no strategy, mistakes return quickly. Strategy + short repetition beats long drilling.
Common mistakes (and what to do)
These patterns appear often:
- Counting both numbers from 1 every time — teach counting on from the larger number
- Confusing 8+5 with 8+6 — slow down, use make-ten, and write the steps once
- Panic with a timer — remove the timer until accuracy is stable
- Parents giving the answer too fast — ask What is the first step? instead
Three wrong answers in a row usually means the stage is too hard. Drop back one step for a few days.
How to practice on IloveMath
A simple daily loop:
- 5 minutes: lesson Addition up to 10 or Addition with carry (as needed)
- 5 minutes: Addition table — slow and accurate
- Optional: one Addition Quiz round only if the child stays calm
- Optional later: Falling Addition for speed review
Ten to fifteen minutes is enough. End while the child still feels successful.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to master addition up to 20?
Often a few weeks of short daily practice. Some children need longer — consistency matters more than speed.
Should we use fingers?
Yes at first. Then gradually replace finger counting with make-ten and counting on strategies.
When should we start timed quizzes?
Only after most answers are correct without panic. Accuracy first, then speed.
What if my child mixes addition and subtraction?
Practice one operation per day for a while. Use clear language: adding means more, subtracting means less.
Where should we start on the site?
Lessons for understanding, then the addition table, then quizzes. Follow the links at the bottom of this page.
Start practicing addition today
Pick a lesson or the addition table and do one short calm session.
Lessons 📚 Addition ➕ Addition Quiz 🎯