Learning Outcomes
Worksheet practice → subtract one number from another → builds the habit of finding how many are left in everyday situations.
Kindergarten learners → use take-away counting strategies → improve confidence with subtraction before moving to written number sentences.
Home practice with this page → match starting and result numbers → reduce mix-ups between how many were there and how many are left.

Subtraction Worksheet for Kindergarten: Subtract One Number
This subtraction worksheet asks a kindergarten child to subtract one number from another to find the number that remains.
Five-year-olds get bored fast, and many children feel stuck when “take away” and “what is left” sound the same. Subtraction practice helps number sense grow, because kids start connecting numbers to real amounts, not just written words.
Use the page for a quick table activity. Pick up counting cubes, point to the first number, count that many, take away the second amount, and have the child point to the answer space. This Whizki Learning page works well for doing one row at a time and cheering the correct “left” number.
Each problem stays short and clear, with a starting amount and a place for the result. The repeated pattern gives a child multiple chances to succeed, even on days when attention drifts.
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