Compare & Order Numbers Worksheets
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10 problemsMedium
20 problemsHard
20 problemsMixed
30 problemsFree printable compare & order numbers worksheets with step-by-step answer keys. Every worksheet is uniquely generated so students never see the same problems twice. Topics covered range from compare two numbers with <, >, = at the easy level through to order 5 numbers including close values at the advanced level.
What is compare & order numbers?
Comparing and ordering numbers involves determining which numbers are greater than, less than, or equal to each other using the symbols <, >, and =. This fundamental skill builds on counting and place value understanding, appearing in standards CCSS.1.NBT.3 and CCSS.2.NBT.4. The process requires examining digits systematically, starting from the leftmost position to determine relative size.
Why it matters
Number comparison forms the foundation for mathematical reasoning across countless real-world scenarios. Students use these skills when comparing prices at stores, determining which pizza has more slices (8 versus 12), or figuring out who scored higher on a test (87 points versus 94 points). Sports statistics rely heavily on ordering — ranking baseball players by batting averages like 0.285, 0.301, and 0.247. Temperature comparisons become critical when deciding appropriate clothing for weather forecasts showing 45°F versus 62°F. In advanced mathematics, number comparison extends to decimals, fractions, and negative numbers, making this early skill essential for algebra, geometry, and data analysis. Financial literacy depends on comparing costs, budgets, and savings amounts throughout life.
Common mistakes to watch for
- ✗Confusing the direction of inequality symbols, writing 8 < 3 instead of 8 > 3 when comparing single digits.
- ✗Assuming longer numbers are always larger, incorrectly ordering 7 before 15 when the problem asks for least to greatest.
- ✗Comparing only the first digit in multi-digit numbers, placing 34 before 7 instead of recognizing 7 < 34.
- ✗Missing numbers when ordering sets, writing 12, 15, 23 instead of the complete sequence 12, 15, 19, 23 from the original list.
Questions teachers ask
What do the symbols <, >, and = mean?+
How do you compare numbers with different amounts of digits?+
What's the fastest way to order multiple numbers?+
When comparing two-digit numbers, which digit matters more?+
How do you check if your number ordering is correct?+
Pick a difficulty
Click any level to open the generator with that difficulty pre-selected.
Beginner
Generate →- Concepts
- Compare two numbers with <, >, =
- Range
- 1–9
- Steps
- 1 step
- Example
- Compare: 4 ___ 7
Easy
Generate →- Concepts
- Order 3 numbers least to greatest
- Range
- 1–20
- Steps
- 2–3 steps
- Example
- Order: 12, 5, 18
Medium
Generate →- Concepts
- Order 4 numbers least to greatest
- Range
- 1–100
- Steps
- 4–5 steps
- Example
- Order: 47, 12, 83, 65
Hard
Generate →- Concepts
- Order 5 numbers including close values
- Range
- 1–999
- Steps
- 3 steps
- Example
- Order: 453, 448, 451, 102, 897
Try a sample problem
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Learn the theory → Read our compare & order numbers guide with worked examples.
Practice online → Interactive compare & order numbers problems with instant feedback.