How to Print Graph Paper at the Correct Scale

Printed graph paper is only useful if the squares are the right size. Learn how to print at 100% scale and check each square with a ruler.

Updated 4 min read By CodingEagles
Free tool Graph Paper Maker Square grid at an exact size you set. Open tool

To print graph paper at the correct scale, set the square size you want in the graph paper maker, download the PDF, and print with scaling set to 100% or Actual size. Then measure one square with a ruler to confirm it matches. If “fit to page” is on, turn it off, because it silently resizes the grid.

Scale is the only thing that matters with graph paper. A grid that is 4 percent too small is worse than useless for measured work, so this guide focuses on getting it exactly right.

Set the square size

In the graph paper maker, choose your unit and size:

  • Millimetres for metric work. 5 mm is the classic choice.
  • Inches for imperial. A quarter inch is the common grid.

You can also set the line weight and colour. Faint grey lines stay out of the way of your own marks, while bolder lines make the grid easier to follow from a distance.

This is where scale is won or lost. When the print dialog opens:

  1. Find the scale or size setting. Set it to 100% or Actual size.
  2. Turn off “Fit to page”, “Shrink oversized pages” or “Scale to fit”. Any of these will resize the grid.
  3. Check the paper size matches what you chose. An A4 grid forced onto Letter, or the reverse, can trigger automatic shrinking.

If your printer driver only offers “fit to printable area”, look for a custom or 100% option, since fitting to the printable area shrinks the page by a few percent to clear the unprintable margin.

Verify with a ruler

Never trust the printout until you have measured it. Lay a ruler across a few squares:

  • For a 5 mm grid, ten squares should span exactly 50 mm.
  • For a quarter-inch grid, four squares should span exactly one inch.

Measuring across several squares makes a small error easier to spot. If the total is off, your settings rescaled the page; fix the scale and reprint.

When scale really counts

Exact squares matter most when you are reading measurements off the grid: plotting graphs for homework or exams, sketching a floor plan or pattern to scale, or working out a layout in design and engineering. For all of these, print at 100% and check with a ruler before you rely on it. The graph paper maker builds the PDF to the exact size you set, so the only variable left is your print dialog.

Frequently asked questions

Why are my graph paper squares the wrong size?
Almost always because the print dialog had 'fit to page' or 'shrink to fit' turned on, which rescales the page. Set the scale to 100% or Actual size instead, and the squares print at exactly the size you chose.
How do I check if graph paper printed at the right scale?
Measure one square with a ruler. If you set 5 mm squares, the printed square should measure 5 mm across. If it is off, your print settings rescaled the page, so reprint with scaling set to 100%.
What square size should I use?
5 mm is the standard for metric graph paper and suits most maths and science work. A quarter inch is the common imperial grid. Smaller squares give finer detail for technical drawing; larger squares suit younger students and rough sketches.

Ready to try it?

Square grid at an exact size you set. Free, in your browser, with a live preview before you print.

Open the Graph Paper Maker