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8 questions with a Holidays theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 3 Math.
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Grade 3 math worksheet on perimeter with a holiday Santa theme. Free printable with answer key included.
This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 3 students and covers Perimeter. The Holidays 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 3 Math. Print-ready at US Letter size. No login required — download and print in seconds.
Last updated: March 2026
Perimeter is the distance around the outside of a shape, and it's a skill your third grader will use far more often than you might expect. When kids understand perimeter, they're building spatial reasoning—the ability to visualize how shapes work in space—which supports everything from reading maps to playing sports. At ages 8-9, students are ready to move beyond just measuring individual sides; they can now add multiple numbers together and see why those measurements matter for real situations like planning a garden, wrapping a gift, or decorating a classroom bulletin board. Learning perimeter also strengthens mental math and addition fluency in a concrete, hands-on way. Students who master this concept develop confidence with measurement and geometry that carries through upper elementary math.
The most common error at this level is counting sides incorrectly or forgetting to measure all four sides of a rectangle. Watch for students who measure only two sides and double them, then stop—they often miss that each side needs to be checked individually, especially when rectangles aren't perfectly drawn. Another frequent mistake is adding the measurements wrong; third graders sometimes reverse digits (writing 24 instead of 42) or lose track of their total. You'll spot this when a child's answer doesn't match the shape's actual perimeter. Have them touch each side with their finger as they measure, then use their fingers to count on their addition.
Create a perimeter hunt at home using items your child sees daily: measure around a picture frame, a placemat, or a holiday wreath with string, then count the string length together. Let your child choose what to measure—ownership makes it memorable. Have them record each measurement and add them up, then guess which household item has the longest perimeter before measuring. This game-like approach helps third graders see perimeter as a puzzle to solve, not a worksheet task.
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