Free. Exclusive. Just for you.
Four unique services that make learning easier, faster, and smarter - only on our website.

Place Value of Decimals Worksheets - 15 Worksheets Library - Free Printable

Place Value of Decimals Worksheets - 15 Worksheets Library

Educational worksheet: Place Value of Decimals Worksheets - 15 Worksheets Library. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.

PNG 416×539 18.1 KB Free · Personal Use
Quality Assured by Worksheets Library Team
Reviewed for educational accuracy and age-appropriateness
ID: #1690849
Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Place Value of Decimals Worksheets - 15 Worksheets Library
Final Answer:
The digit in the tenths place is 2 → color blue
The digit in the ten thousandths place is 3 → color yellow
The digit in the ones place is 4 → color purple
The digit in the hundredths place is 6 → color gray
The digit in the thousands place is 1 → color green
The digit in the hundred thousands place is 1 → color orange
The digit in the tens place is 5 → color pink
The digit in the ten thousands place is 4 → color brown
The digit in the ten millionths place is 1 → color peach
The digit in the hundred thousandths place is 2 → color white
The digit in the millionths place is 3 → color light green

So, matching each place to its digit and color:

- hundred thousands: 1 → orange
- ten thousands: 4 → brown
- thousands: 1 → green
- hundreds: 3 → (no instruction — left blank)
- tens: 5 → pink
- ones: 4 → purple
- tenths: 2 → blue
- hundredths: 6 → gray
- thousandths: 3 → (no instruction — left blank)
- ten thousandths: 3 → yellow
- hundred thousandths: 2 → white
- millionths: 3 → light green
- ten millionths: 1 → peach

But the worksheet only asks to cut and paste word boxes over correct place *and* color according to given value — the number shown under the place-value chart is:

1 4 1 3 5 4 . 2 6 3 3 2 1

Let’s write it with place labels:

| Place | Digit |
|--------------------|-------|
| hundred thousands | 1 |
| ten thousands | 4 |
| thousands | 1 |
| hundreds | 3 |
| tens | 5 |
| ones | 4 |
| tenths | 2 |
| hundredths | 6 |
| thousandths | 3 |
| ten thousandths| 3 |
| hundred thousandths| 2 |
| millionths | 3 |
| ten millionths | 1 |

Now apply coloring instructions:

- tenths → blue → digit 2
- ten thousandths → yellow → digit 3
- ones → purple → digit 4
- hundredths → gray → digit 6
- thousands → green → digit 1
- hundred thousands → orange → digit 1
- tens → pink → digit 5
- ten thousands → brown → digit 4
- ten millionths → peach → digit 1
- hundred thousandths → white → digit 2
- millionths → light green → digit 3

All digits match.

Thus, the final answer is the list of colors per place as instructed — but since the question says “Cut and paste the word boxes over the correct place. Color according to the given place value,” and no multiple choice is given, the expected output is likely the colored digits as per instructions.

However, since the user only wants the Final Answer, and this is a coloring/cut-paste activity, the only concrete answer is identifying which digit goes where and its color. But in standard worksheet practice, the answer key would list:

- hundred thousands: 1 → orange
- ten thousands: 4 → brown
- thousands: 1 → green
- tens: 5 → pink
- ones: 4 → purple
- tenths: 2 → blue
- hundredths: 6 → gray
- ten thousandths: 3 → yellow
- hundred thousandths: 2 → white
- millionths: 3 → light green
- ten millionths: 1 → peach

Since the instruction says “Color according to the given place value”, and all are specified, the final answer is the mapping above.

But per format, only the Final Answer section should contain the concise result. Since this is a worksheet with specific coloring, and no single numeric answer, the most appropriate final answer is the sequence of colors for the places listed in the bottom row (left to right), which correspond to:

hundred thousands, ten thousands, thousands, hundreds, tens, ones, tenths, hundredths, thousandths, ten thousandths, hundred thousandths, millionths, ten millionths

From the number: 1 4 1 3 5 4 . 2 6 3 3 2 1

Digits:
1 (hundred thousands) → orange
4 (ten thousands) → brown
1 (thousands) → green
3 (hundreds) → *(no instruction)* → leave uncolored
5 (tens) → pink
4 (ones) → purple
2 (tenths) → blue
6 (hundredths) → gray
3 (thousandths) → *(no instruction)*
3 (ten thousandths) → yellow
2 (hundred thousandths) → white
1 (millionths) → light green
1 (ten millionths) → peach

The worksheet bottom row has 13 boxes labeled exactly in that order, and only 11 have coloring instructions — so 2 (hundreds, thousandths) remain uncolored.

But the problem likely expects just the coloring assignments as per instructions. Since the user asked to “solve the problem accurately”, and the task is to assign colors, the final answer is:

Orange, Brown, Green, (blank), Pink, Purple, Blue, Gray, (blank), Yellow, White, Light Green, Peach

However, worksheets like this usually expect the student to fill colors; since we must give a single final answer, and the only unambiguous output is the digit-color pairs per instruction, but the format demands one answer line.

Rechecking: The top row has 13 place-value columns labeled “Place Value” with numbers below:
1 4 1 3 5 4 . 2 6 3 3 2 1
That’s 13 digits: positions 1–6 before decimal, then 7–13 after.

Positions:
1: hundred thousands → 1 → orange
2: ten thousands → 4 → brown
3: thousands → 1 → green
4: hundreds → 3 → no color instruction
5: tens → 5 → pink
6: ones → 4 → purple
7: tenths → 2 → blue
8: hundredths → 6 → gray
9: thousandths → 3 → no instruction
10: ten thousandths → 3 → yellow
11: hundred thousandths → 2 → white
12: millionths → 3 → light green
13: ten millionths → 1 → peach

So the colored places are: 1,2,3,5,6,7,8,10,11,12,13 → 11 places.

Since the question says “Color according to the given place value”, and the only thing to output is the solution, and per standard for such worksheets, the answer key lists the colors in order of the bottom row (13 items), with blanks where no instruction.

But the instruction says: “ONLY THEN provide the final answer”, and it must be concise.

Given all that, the expected final answer is the list of colors for the 13 places, using the instructions:

orange, brown, green, —, pink, purple, blue, gray, —, yellow, white, light green, peach

But since we can’t use “—” in a clean final answer, and the worksheet likely ignores unlabeled ones, perhaps the problem only cares about the 11 specified.

However, looking at the original worksheet text, the coloring instructions explicitly list 11 items — so the answer is those 11 mappings. But the format requires a single-line final answer.

I will provide the colors in the order of the place names as listed in the bottom row (13 items), using only the given instructions, and leaving unspecified as "none", but per strictest interpretation, the problem expects the student to color those 11 digits — so the verifiable correct response is:

The digits and their colors are:
- 1 (hundred thousands): orange
- 4 (ten thousands): brown
- 1 (thousands): green
- 5 (tens): pink
- 4 (ones): purple
- 2 (tenths): blue
- 6 (hundredths): gray
- 3 (ten thousandths): yellow
- 2 (hundred thousandths): white
- 3 (millionths): light green
- 1 (ten millionths): peach

That’s 11 items. Since the question doesn’t ask for a single value, but to solve the task, and the only objective output is the coloring, I will summarize the final answer as the sequence of colors for the places that have instructions, in the order they appear in the instruction list:

blue, yellow, purple, gray, green, orange, pink, brown, peach, white, light green

Wait — the instruction list order is:
1. tenths → blue
2. ten thousandths → yellow
3. ones → purple
4. hundredths → gray
5. thousands → green
6. hundred thousands → orange
7. tens → pink
8. ten thousands → brown
9. ten millionths → peach
10. hundred thousandths → white
11. millionths → light green

So the 11 colors in instruction order:
blue, yellow, purple, gray, green, orange, pink, brown, peach, white, light green

But that’s not how the worksheet is filled — the student fills by place, not by instruction order.

Given the ambiguity, and that the standard for such problems is to report the color for each place from left to right (hundred thousands to ten millionths), and only color those with instructions, the safest final answer — as would be accepted by a teacher — is:

hundred thousands: orange
ten thousands: brown
thousands: green
tens: pink
ones: purple
tenths: blue
hundredths: gray
ten thousandths: yellow
hundred thousandths: white
millionths: light green
ten millionths: peach

Since the format requires only the Final Answer line, and it must be concise, I will output the 13-color sequence with blanks omitted and only the required ones implied — but that’s not precise.

After careful review: The number is 141,354.263321
Breakdown:
- Hundred thousands: 1
- Ten thousands: 4
- Thousands: 1
- Hundreds: 3
- Tens: 5
- Ones: 4
- Tenths: 2
- Hundredths: 6
- Thousandths: 3
- Ten thousandths: 3
- Hundred thousandths: 2
- Millionths: 3
- Ten millionths: 1

Coloring:
- 1 (hundred thousands) → orange
- 4 (ten thousands) → brown
- 1 (thousands) → green
- 5 (tens) → pink
- 4 (ones) → purple
- 2 (tenths) → blue
- 6 (hundredths) → gray
- 3 (ten thousandths) → yellow
- 2 (hundred thousandths) → white
- 3 (millionths) → light green
- 1 (ten millionths) → peach

That’s all. So the final answer is the list, but per instruction, I’ll give the colors in the order of the 13 places, using “—” for none, but since the system likely expects a simple answer, and many such worksheets have the answer as the colored digits, I conclude:

The correct coloring is:
- 1 → orange
- 4 → brown
- 1 → green
- (3) → no color
- 5 → pink
- 4 → purple
- 2 → blue
- 6 → gray
- (3) → no color
- 3 → yellow
- 2 → white
- 3 → light green
- 1 → peach

For the purpose of this response, and since only a single final answer line is allowed, I will output the 11 colors corresponding to the 11 instructions, in the order the places are listed in the bottom row that have instructions — but the clearest correct answer is:

orange, brown, green, pink, purple, blue, gray, yellow, white, light green, peach

That’s 11 colors for the 11 specified places, omitting the two with no instruction.

Yes.

Final Answer:
orange, brown, green, pink, purple, blue, gray, yellow, white, light green, peach
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of identify decimal place value worksheet.
Print Download

How to use

Click Print to open a print-ready version directly in your browser, or use Download to save the file to your device. The ⭐ Answer button generates an AI answer key instantly - useful for teachers who need a quick reference. Need a different version? Our AI Worksheet Generator lets you create a custom worksheet on any topic in seconds.

(view all identify decimal place value worksheet)

Identifying Place of Decimal Numbers from Millionths to Hundred ...
Decimal Place Value Chart - Free Printable Place Value Chart With ...
Place Value Worksheets | Place Value Worksheets for Practice
Place Value of Decimals Worksheets - 15 Worksheets.com
Decimal Place Value Worksheet
Decimal Place Value Mystery Numbers
Decimal Place Value Worksheets 4th Grade
Decimal Place Value Worksheets 4th Grade
Decimal Place Value Worksheets 4th Grade
Identify the Place Value in a Decimal Number - Math Worksheets ...