Multiples of 125

This page shows you all the multiples of 125 from 125 × 1 up to 125 × 50. You can quickly scan the table, use the calculator on the right, or just double-check your homework step by step.

Every time you change the number in the address bar (for example /124/ or /126/), the page refreshes with the correct multiples for that number.

Quick calculator

× =

Type any whole number, click “Calculate”, and the tool instantly shows the result for 125 multiplied by your input.

Table of multiples of 125 (1 to 50)

Here is a complete list of the first 50 multiples of 125. Each row shows the multiplication and the result so you can follow the pattern and use it for practice, mental math or checking your answers.

# Expression Result
1 125 × 1 125
2 125 × 2 250
3 125 × 3 375
4 125 × 4 500
5 125 × 5 625
6 125 × 6 750
7 125 × 7 875
8 125 × 8 1000
9 125 × 9 1125
10 125 × 10 1250
11 125 × 11 1375
12 125 × 12 1500
13 125 × 13 1625
14 125 × 14 1750
15 125 × 15 1875
16 125 × 16 2000
17 125 × 17 2125
18 125 × 18 2250
19 125 × 19 2375
20 125 × 20 2500
21 125 × 21 2625
22 125 × 22 2750
23 125 × 23 2875
24 125 × 24 3000
25 125 × 25 3125
26 125 × 26 3250
27 125 × 27 3375
28 125 × 28 3500
29 125 × 29 3625
30 125 × 30 3750
31 125 × 31 3875
32 125 × 32 4000
33 125 × 33 4125
34 125 × 34 4250
35 125 × 35 4375
36 125 × 36 4500
37 125 × 37 4625
38 125 × 38 4750
39 125 × 39 4875
40 125 × 40 5000
41 125 × 41 5125
42 125 × 42 5250
43 125 × 43 5375
44 125 × 44 5500
45 125 × 45 5625
46 125 × 46 5750
47 125 × 47 5875
48 125 × 48 6000
49 125 × 49 6125
50 125 × 50 6250

Because 125 is an odd number, the multiples alternate between odd and even results. This is a useful trick when you quickly want to check if a result “looks right” without doing the full calculation again.

Multiples of 125 often end in 0 or 5, which is why they show up so often in money and measurement problems. You can use this pattern to estimate answers in your head before you write them down.

A quick way to generate these multiples on your own is to start from 125 × 10 and move up or down in steps of 125. For example, once you know 125 × 20, you can get 125 × 19 or × 21 by subtracting or adding one more block of 125.