Printable Flashcard Maker
Type or paste your cards, choose a layout, and hit Print. Free forever — your cards never leave your browser.
Your cards never leave your browser — nothing is stored.
1 — Your Cards
Paste a list instead
One card per line — use term, definition or term[TAB]definition.
2 — Layout Options
3 — Preview & Print
This preview is print-calibrated. What you see here is what prints.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Everything stays in your browser tab. Nothing is sent to a server or saved to any database. When you close the tab, the cards are gone — so print before you close!
Enable the "Double-sided" toggle. The maker generates two pages: the first has all the question fronts, the second has all the answer backs with columns mirrored so they align when you flip the paper on the long (left) edge. In your printer dialog choose "Print on both sides" or print page 1, flip the stack, and print page 2.
Three grid layouts: 2×4 (8 large index-card-style cards per page), 3×3 (9 medium cards), and 3.5″×2.0″ business-card grid (10 per page). Each is calibrated to standard US Letter paper.
Yes. Use the "Paste a list" textarea. Put each card on its own line in "term, definition" or "term[TAB]definition" format. Hit "Add from paste" and the rows fill in automatically.
Yes. The tool is pure HTML/CSS/JavaScript — no plugins needed. On iOS, use the Share → Print option to send to AirPrint. On Mac, open Print and choose "Save as PDF" to get a PDF file.
There is no hard limit. Practically, once you have more cards than fit on one page the maker automatically adds more pages. Very large decks (200+) may slow down the preview slightly.
More flashcard tools
- Double-sided Flashcard Maker — built-in alignment guide for duplex printing
- Vocabulary Flashcard Maker — term, definition & example format for language learning
Guides & Resources
- How to Make Flashcards That Actually Help You Study
- How to Print Double-Sided Flashcards (Alignment Settings)
- Best Cardstock and Paper for Durable Flashcards
- Spaced Repetition Explained (and How to Use Printed Cards)
- How to Make Language-Learning Flashcards (Vocab Decks)
- Printable vs Digital Flashcards: When Paper Wins