Grade 1 Subtraction Worksheet: Halloween Candy Counts

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Math Grade 1 Halloween Theme
What's inside this worksheet
Grade 1 Math worksheet preview — Subtraction
Questions
Answer key — Grade 1 Math worksheet
Answer Key · Teacher Use

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8 questions with a Halloween theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 1 Math.

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SubjectMath
GradeGrade 1
TopicSubtraction
Created by Examel Education Team · Aligned to Common Core State Standards
What is included
8 curriculum-aligned questions
Full answer key for parents and teachers
Halloween theme to keep kids engaged
Print-ready PDF — US Letter size
Name, date, and score fields included
CCSS: CCSS.MATH.1.OA.C.6
How to Use This Worksheet
1
Print
Download the PDF and print on US Letter paper.
2
Review
Read through the questions with your child or student.
3
Complete
Let them work independently. Use the answer key to check.
4
Extend
Try a related worksheet to reinforce the skill.
Learning Objective

Students will be able to subtract within 10 using Halloween contexts

Teacher Tip

Use physical manipulatives like candy pieces or blocks to demonstrate subtraction before students work independently.

Sample Questions

...plus 5 more questions in the full worksheet

Standard: CCSS.MATH.1.OA.C.6

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About this Math worksheet for Grade 1

Grade 1 Halloween subtraction worksheet. Practice subtraction with candy counts. Free printable with answer key.

This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 1 students and covers Subtraction. The Halloween theme keeps kids engaged while they practice essential Math skills. Every worksheet includes a full answer key making it easy for parents and teachers to check work instantly. Aligned to Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for Grade 1 Math. Print-ready at US Letter size. No login required — download and print in seconds.

Last updated: March 2026

Why Subtraction matters in Grade 1

Subtraction is one of the first inverse operations your child learns, and it's essential for building number sense and confidence with math. At ages 6-7, students are developing the ability to decompose numbers and understand that "taking away" is different from just counting. This skill appears everywhere in daily life: sharing snacks with a friend, removing toys from a pile, or figuring out how many Halloween candies remain after eating a few. Subtraction also strengthens working memory and logical thinking—your child learns to hold a starting number in mind, perform an action, and predict the result. By mastering subtraction within 10 and 20, first graders build a foundation for multiplication, division, and word problem solving in later grades. When children can fluently subtract small numbers, they develop mathematical confidence that carries into every math concept ahead.

What your student will practice

Common mistakes to watch for

The most common error at this age is counting backward from the whole number instead of counting the amount being removed. For example, when solving 8 - 3, a child might count "8, 7, 6, 5" and answer 5, when the correct answer is 5 (they lose track of what they're removing). Another frequent mistake is confusing the order of numbers—writing 3 - 8 when the problem says 8 - 3. Watch for children who count on their fingers but lose track partway through, or who write answers without physically showing their work. Asking your child to touch or move objects while solving subtraction problems helps catch these patterns early.

Teacher & Parent Tip

Use snack time or toy cleanup as a real subtraction practice space. Place 7 crackers on a plate, eat 2, and ask "How many are left?" Let your child physically remove the crackers and count what remains. This concrete, hands-on approach helps first graders connect the abstract symbol (−) to what subtraction actually means. Repeat with different starting amounts (up to 10) several times a week, and gradually move from touching objects to drawing circles and crossing them out.

About Examel

Examel provides 10,000+ printable worksheets for Grades 1–6, aligned to Common Core State Standards. Every worksheet is reviewed for accuracy and includes a full answer key. New worksheets added weekly across Math, English, and Science. Built by educators for parents, teachers, and homeschool families.