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Parent Guide4 min read

Singapore Math Drills Is Now on Google Play

Singapore Math Drills Team · 6 July 2026

The best time to practise math isn't always when your child is sitting at a desk. It's the fifteen minutes in the car after school. It's the quiet spell at a coffee shop while siblings are at enrichment. It's the weekend morning before the rest of the house wakes up.

For most families, those windows go unused — not because the child doesn't want to practise, but because the practice tool lives on a laptop at home.

That's changed. Singapore Math Drills is now available on Google Play, free for all Android devices.

Why mobile matters for primary math

There's a well-established principle in learning science called distributed practice — spreading shorter study sessions across multiple days produces stronger retention than cramming the same total time into one sitting. The research is clear: ten minutes of focused practice five days a week outperforms a single fifty-minute session on the weekend.

The problem has always been logistics. Getting a child to sit down for a dedicated math session at home requires momentum — the laptop charged, the Wi-Fi working, no distractions. On a phone, the friction drops to almost nothing. The child opens the app, picks up where they left off, and practises for as long as the moment allows.

This is especially powerful for the types of math that benefit from frequent, low-stakes repetition: multiplication tables, fraction equivalence, number bonds, and the mental arithmetic that underpins Paper 1. These aren't topics that reward marathon sessions. They reward daily touch.

What the app includes

The mobile app carries the full Singapore Math Drills experience — not a watered-down companion version.

Full P1–P6 syllabus coverage. Every topic in the Singapore MOE Primary Mathematics syllabus is available, from number bonds in Primary 1 to algebra and ratio in Primary 6. The curriculum mapping is exact: if a topic appears in the school syllabus, it's in the app.

Focus Mode and Sprint Mode. Focus Mode lets your child work through questions at their own pace with hints and no time pressure — ideal for new or difficult topics. Sprint Mode adds a countdown timer and streak tracking for building rapid recall on mastered skills. Switching between the two is a single tap.

Worked solutions after every answer. Whether your child gets a question right or wrong, they see a step-by-step explanation. For bar-model word problems, this means a full visual breakdown of how the model maps to the question. The explanations are written in plain language, not textbook jargon.

Progress that carries over. Your child's accuracy data, mastery levels, and focus-area recommendations sync between the phone and the web version. Start a session on the laptop, continue on the phone — the skill map picks up exactly where it left off.

No ads, no in-app purchases. The app is free to use. There are no advertisements, no premium upsells inside the practice experience, and no social features that pull your child away from the math.

Making the most of small pockets of time

You don't need to carve out an hour. Some of the most effective practice happens in short bursts:

  • After school, before homework. A five-minute Sprint Mode session on multiplication tables or number bonds warms up the brain without feeling like work. It's the math equivalent of stretching before a run.
  • While waiting. Dental appointments, siblings at lessons, the queue at the hawker centre — any idle moment becomes a chance to squeeze in a few fraction or geometry questions.
  • Before bed. A single Focus Mode session on a topic your child found tricky that day, with hints turned on, can be the difference between forgetting overnight and consolidating the concept.

The key is consistency, not duration. Three five-minute sessions across a day teach more than one fifteen-minute session at a desk. The app tracks cumulative practice time, so you can see that those small moments add up.

What parents see on their phone

When your child practises on the mobile app, their progress feeds into the same parent dashboard you'd see on the web. You can check which topics your child worked on, whether their accuracy is trending up, and where they're still struggling — all from your own phone.

The weekly Parent Digest email still arrives every Sunday, summarising the week's practice in plain language: what was mastered, what needs attention, and what's coming next. The mobile app doesn't replace that — it feeds it. More frequent practice means richer data, which means more useful summaries.

If your child has siblings on the same family plan, each child's progress is tracked separately on the app. You can switch between profiles to check on each child individually — no separate logins or accounts required.

A note on iOS

The app is currently available on Google Play for Android devices. An iOS version is in active development and will be released on the App Store when it's ready. If your family uses iPhones, the web version at singaporemathdrills.com works beautifully in Safari and can be added to your home screen for an app-like experience.

Getting started

If you're already a Singapore Math Drills user, download the app and sign in with your existing account. Your child's progress, skill map, and all settings carry over immediately.

If you're new, the app works without an account for browsing topics and trying sample questions. Creating a free account takes about thirty seconds and unlocks full progress tracking.

Either way, the practice is free. No credit card, no trial period, no obligation.

Download on Google Play

PUT IT INTO PRACTICE

Try what you just learned

Free, distraction-free math drills aligned to the MOE syllabus. No sign-up needed to try.

Now available onGoogle PlayComing soon toApp Store
Singapore Math Drills
How it worksCurriculumFree PracticeResourcesFor Schools
Sign in
Start Free
All resources
Parent Guide4 min read

Singapore Math Drills Is Now on Google Play

Singapore Math Drills Team · 6 July 2026

The best time to practise math isn't always when your child is sitting at a desk. It's the fifteen minutes in the car after school. It's the quiet spell at a coffee shop while siblings are at enrichment. It's the weekend morning before the rest of the house wakes up.

For most families, those windows go unused — not because the child doesn't want to practise, but because the practice tool lives on a laptop at home.

That's changed. Singapore Math Drills is now available on Google Play, free for all Android devices.

Why mobile matters for primary math

There's a well-established principle in learning science called distributed practice — spreading shorter study sessions across multiple days produces stronger retention than cramming the same total time into one sitting. The research is clear: ten minutes of focused practice five days a week outperforms a single fifty-minute session on the weekend.

The problem has always been logistics. Getting a child to sit down for a dedicated math session at home requires momentum — the laptop charged, the Wi-Fi working, no distractions. On a phone, the friction drops to almost nothing. The child opens the app, picks up where they left off, and practises for as long as the moment allows.

This is especially powerful for the types of math that benefit from frequent, low-stakes repetition: multiplication tables, fraction equivalence, number bonds, and the mental arithmetic that underpins Paper 1. These aren't topics that reward marathon sessions. They reward daily touch.

What the app includes

The mobile app carries the full Singapore Math Drills experience — not a watered-down companion version.

Full P1–P6 syllabus coverage. Every topic in the Singapore MOE Primary Mathematics syllabus is available, from number bonds in Primary 1 to algebra and ratio in Primary 6. The curriculum mapping is exact: if a topic appears in the school syllabus, it's in the app.

Focus Mode and Sprint Mode. Focus Mode lets your child work through questions at their own pace with hints and no time pressure — ideal for new or difficult topics. Sprint Mode adds a countdown timer and streak tracking for building rapid recall on mastered skills. Switching between the two is a single tap.

Worked solutions after every answer. Whether your child gets a question right or wrong, they see a step-by-step explanation. For bar-model word problems, this means a full visual breakdown of how the model maps to the question. The explanations are written in plain language, not textbook jargon.

Progress that carries over. Your child's accuracy data, mastery levels, and focus-area recommendations sync between the phone and the web version. Start a session on the laptop, continue on the phone — the skill map picks up exactly where it left off.

No ads, no in-app purchases. The app is free to use. There are no advertisements, no premium upsells inside the practice experience, and no social features that pull your child away from the math.

Making the most of small pockets of time

You don't need to carve out an hour. Some of the most effective practice happens in short bursts:

  • After school, before homework. A five-minute Sprint Mode session on multiplication tables or number bonds warms up the brain without feeling like work. It's the math equivalent of stretching before a run.
  • While waiting. Dental appointments, siblings at lessons, the queue at the hawker centre — any idle moment becomes a chance to squeeze in a few fraction or geometry questions.
  • Before bed. A single Focus Mode session on a topic your child found tricky that day, with hints turned on, can be the difference between forgetting overnight and consolidating the concept.

The key is consistency, not duration. Three five-minute sessions across a day teach more than one fifteen-minute session at a desk. The app tracks cumulative practice time, so you can see that those small moments add up.

What parents see on their phone

When your child practises on the mobile app, their progress feeds into the same parent dashboard you'd see on the web. You can check which topics your child worked on, whether their accuracy is trending up, and where they're still struggling — all from your own phone.

The weekly Parent Digest email still arrives every Sunday, summarising the week's practice in plain language: what was mastered, what needs attention, and what's coming next. The mobile app doesn't replace that — it feeds it. More frequent practice means richer data, which means more useful summaries.

If your child has siblings on the same family plan, each child's progress is tracked separately on the app. You can switch between profiles to check on each child individually — no separate logins or accounts required.

A note on iOS

The app is currently available on Google Play for Android devices. An iOS version is in active development and will be released on the App Store when it's ready. If your family uses iPhones, the web version at singaporemathdrills.com works beautifully in Safari and can be added to your home screen for an app-like experience.

Getting started

If you're already a Singapore Math Drills user, download the app and sign in with your existing account. Your child's progress, skill map, and all settings carry over immediately.

If you're new, the app works without an account for browsing topics and trying sample questions. Creating a free account takes about thirty seconds and unlocks full progress tracking.

Either way, the practice is free. No credit card, no trial period, no obligation.

Download on Google Play

PUT IT INTO PRACTICE

Try what you just learned

Free, distraction-free math drills aligned to the MOE syllabus. No sign-up needed to try.

Now available onGoogle PlayComing soon toApp Store