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Free Letter X Tracing Worksheet (Printable PDF)
Download a free printable letter X tracing worksheet for children aged 3–6. Practise uppercase X and lowercase x with guided tracing rows, then write from memory. X is for Xylophone. No sign-up, no watermark. Print and go.
What is on this worksheet
Uppercase X
A solid model letter followed by four faint copies to trace. Children see the correct letterform then practise it immediately in the same row.
Lowercase x
Same trace-and-repeat format for the lowercase. Both cases on one sheet so children learn the pair together — as they appear in real words and books.
Free-write lines
Open lines at the bottom for writing from memory — where tracing becomes real writing and the letter sticks in long-term muscle memory.
About the letter X — sound, shape, and words
Letter X most commonly makes the /ks/ sound as in fox, box, and mix. At the start of words like xylophone, it makes the /z/ sound. X is one of the rarest letters in English text but has a distinctive shape that children enjoy tracing.
How to form the letter X
Uppercase X: draw a diagonal line from the upper left to the lower right, then another diagonal line from the upper right to the lower left — two lines crossing in the centre. Lowercase x: same shape as uppercase but smaller, sitting between the mid-line and the baseline.
Words that start with X
Use these words while tracing to connect the letter shape to a sound: Xylophone, X-ray, Ox, Box, Fox, Mix, Six, Taxi. Say X — Xylophone while tracing. Explain that X usually comes at the end of words (fox, box, mix) and makes the /ks/ sound there — xylophone is a special exception.
The Todpoles Letter X flash card

The Todpoles Alphabet flash card for Letter X pairs Xx with a Xylophone illustration — the same word-letter connection used on this worksheet. When children see the card, trace the letter, and hear the word together, they form a much stronger memory than any single activity alone.
In the Todpoles app, scanning the Letter X card unlocks interactive letter games — children hear the letter sound, see the letter animate, and match it in a game. The card and worksheet work together: paper builds the motor skill, the app reinforces the sound.
How to use this worksheet
Ages 3–4
Do one tracing row per sitting — uppercase first, lowercase in a later session. Trace slowly, saying “X — Xylophone” aloud with each stroke. Do not rush to the free-write lines; tracing builds the motor memory that makes free writing possible. Three to five sessions spread over a week is ideal for this age group.
Ages 5–6
Complete the full sheet — uppercase, lowercase, and the free-write lines — in one sitting. Aim for consistent size and letters sitting on the baseline. Once free-writing feels confident, try writing the letter without looking at the model at all.
Common mistake to avoid
Many parents skip straight to the free-write section. This feels faster but skips the motor-learning phase — children end up with shaky, inconsistent letterforms. Let the tracing rows do their job first. The free-write section is the reward, not the shortcut.
Frequently asked questions
What age is this worksheet for?
Ages 3–6. Children aged 3–4 typically work one row at a time over several sessions. Children aged 5–6 can complete the full sheet — uppercase, lowercase, and free-write — in one sitting.
What does the letter X sound like?
Letter X usually makes the /ks/ sound — as in fox, box, and mix. At the start of some words like xylophone, it makes a /z/ sound. It is one of the rarest letters but its shape is distinctive and memorable for children.
Is this worksheet free to download?
Yes — completely free. Click the download button and the PDF opens directly. No email, no account, no watermark. Print as many copies as you need.
Can I print more than one copy?
Yes. We recommend printing 2–3 copies and using a pencil so your child can erase and repeat. Most children need 3–5 practice sessions before writing a letter confidently from memory.
What comes after Letter X?
Move on to Letter Y once your child can write X from memory with consistent size and shape. You can also browse all 26 letters and download the full A–Z bundle.
Todpoles App
More learning with Todpoles
The Todpoles app turns these letters into interactive games. Scan any flash card, hear the letter sound, and play matching activities — all anchored to the physical learning your child is already doing with these worksheets.

