Multiplication Table of 25
The 25 times table is the list of products you get when you multiply 25 by each whole number in turn. It is one of the most pattern-rich tables, because 25 is exactly one quarter of 100, so its multiples march in a tidy 25, 50, 75, 100 rhythm.
Table of 25 up to 10
Multiplication | Product |
|---|---|
$25 \times 1$ | 25 |
$25 \times 2$ | 50 |
$25 \times 3$ | 75 |
$25 \times 4$ | 100 |
$25 \times 5$ | 125 |
$25 \times 6$ | 150 |
$25 \times 7$ | 175 |
$25 \times 8$ | 200 |
$25 \times 9$ | 225 |
$25 \times 10$ | 250 |
Table of 25 up to 20
Multiplication | Product |
|---|---|
$25 \times 11$ | 275 |
$25 \times 12$ | 300 |
$25 \times 13$ | 325 |
$25 \times 14$ | 350 |
$25 \times 15$ | 375 |
$25 \times 16$ | 400 |
$25 \times 17$ | 425 |
$25 \times 18$ | 450 |
$25 \times 19$ | 475 |
$25 \times 20$ | 500 |
Table of 25 in Words
Reading the table aloud builds the 25–50–75–100 rhythm before the numbers stick.
One times 25 is 25
Two times 25 is 50
Three times 25 is 75
Four times 25 is 100
Five times 25 is 125
Six times 25 is 150
Seven times 25 is 175
Eight times 25 is 200
Nine times 25 is 225
Ten times 25 is 250
What Is the 25 Times Table?
The 25 times table is repeated addition of 25. Each row adds one more group of twenty-five, so the table answers "how much is twenty-five, added to itself, again and again?"
Built from the ground up, the ladder looks like this:
$25$
$25 + 25 = 50$
$25 + 25 + 25 = 75$
$25 + 25 + 25 + 25 = 100$
Multiplication is the shortcut for this stacking, which is why $25 \times 4$ and "four twenty-fives added together" both give 100.
Multiples of 25
The multiples of 25 are the numbers you reach by skip-counting in twenty-fives. The first twenty multiples are:
25, 50, 75, 100, 125, 150, 175, 200, 225, 250, 275, 300, 325, 350, 375, 400, 425, 450, 475, 500.
Every entry in the 25 times table is a multiple of 25. The units digit alternates 5, 0, 5, 0: odd multiples end in 5 and even multiples end in 0, and the last two digits cycle 25, 50, 75, 00.
Tips and Tricks to Memorize the 25 Times Table
Twenty-five is built on the cleanest pattern of any large table. These tricks make it almost effortless.
Trick 1: Use the quarter-of-100 rule
Since $25 = 100 \div 4$, to multiply any number by 25, multiply it by 100 and divide by 4. For $25 \times 8$: $8 \times 100 = 800$, and $800 \div 4 = 200$.
Trick 2: Lean on the 25, 50, 75, 00 cycle
The last two digits repeat 25, 50, 75, 00 every four multiples. So $25 \times 13$ ends in 25, $25 \times 14$ in 50, and so on, which is useful for checking a recalled product.
Trick 3: Skip-count by 25
Count 25, 50, 75, 100 in your head; it is the same rhythm as counting quarters of a dollar or rupee, so many learners already know it cold.
Trick 4: Decompose a big multiplier
For a large row, split the multiplier. For $25 \times 16$, break 16 into $10 + 6$: $25 \times 10 = 250$ and $25 \times 6 = 150$, so $250 + 150 = 400$.
How to Read and Use the 25 Times Table
Read each row left to right: $25 \times 6 = 150$ is "twenty-five multiplied six times gives one hundred fifty." The first number is the group size, the second is the count of groups, and the product is the total.
To learn it, recite 25, 50, 75, 100 until the quarter-cycle is automatic, then quiz yourself in a shuffled order so you are recalling rather than chanting. When a row slips, fall back on the quarter-of-100 rule, which rebuilds any product in two quick steps.
Where the 25 Times Table Appears
Twenty-five is the math of quarters: a 25-paisa or 25-cent coin means four of them make a whole unit, so counting quarter-coins runs straight off this table. It also shows up in percentages (25% is one quarter), in scoring systems built on 25-point rounds, in any measure split into four equal parts, and in a cricket run target counted in 25s.
Solved Examples
Example 1
What is $25 \times 8$?
Use the quarter rule: $8 \times 100 = 800$, then $800 \div 4 = 200$.
Final answer: $25 \times 8 = 200$.
Example 2 (Wrong path first)
Jack buys 6 packs of 25 crayons each. How many crayons in total?
Wrong attempt. The rusher recalls that multiples of 25 end in 5 or 0 and writes 105.
Why it breaks. Four packs already hold $25 \times 4 = 100$, so six packs must be well above 100, and 105 is barely more than four packs, far too small for six.
Correct. Quarter rule: $6 \times 100 = 600$, then $600 \div 4 = 150$.
$25 \times 6 = 150$
Final answer: 150 crayons.
Example 3
Find $25 \times 12$.
Split it: $25 \times 10 = 250$ and $25 \times 2 = 50$.
$250 + 50 = 300$
Final answer: $25 \times 12 = 300$.
Example 4
$25 \times {?} = 375$.
Divide to find the missing factor: $375 \div 25 = 15$.
Final answer: $25 \times 15 = 375$.
Example 5
Ron makes 25 cookies a day. How many does he make in 31 days?
$25 \times 31 = (25 \times 30) + (25 \times 1) = 750 + 25 = 775$.
Final answer: 775 cookies.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Dividing by 4 but forgetting to multiply by 100 first
Where it slips in: Using the quarter rule too fast and dropping the $\times 100$ step.
Don't do this: Writing $25 \times 8$ as $8 \div 4 = 2$.
The correct way: Multiply by 100 first, then divide by 4, so $800 \div 4 = 200$. The factor of 100 is what scales the answer correctly.
Mistake 2: Mixing up the even and odd endings
Where it slips in: Recalling a product and guessing its ending without checking whether the multiplier is odd or even.
Don't do this: Writing $25 \times 7 = 170$ (an even-style 0 ending for an odd multiplier).
The correct way: Odd multipliers give an ending of 5, even multipliers give 0. Seven is odd, so $25 \times 7 = 175$ ends in 5.
Practice Questions
$25 \times 4 = {?}$
$25 \times 9 = {?}$
Fill in the blank: $25 \times {?} = 300$.
A pack holds 25 stickers. How many in 8 packs?
$25 \times 11 = {?}$
Which is larger, $25 \times 7$ or $25 \times 8$?
$25 \times 20 = {?}$
A quarter-coin is worth 25 cents. What is the value of 14 quarter-coins?
Answers: 1. 100 2. 225 3. 12 4. 200 5. 275 6. $25 \times 8 = 200$ is larger 7. 500 8. 350 cents.
Related Multiplication Tables
Tables from 1 to 20 hub — every chart from 2 to 20 in one place.
5 times table — the factor behind the 0-or-5 endings.
20 times table — another round-number table built on fives and twos.
12 times table — a useful neighbour for comparison.
For pattern-based shortcuts, see the Bhanzu guide to mental math tricks.
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