Letter Matching Printable for Preschool
Letter matching printable pages are a simple way to help preschoolers connect uppercase and lowercase letters without overthinking your day. If your child recognizes some letters but struggles to match them, this kind of focused practice can make a big difference fast.
These draw-a-line worksheets are designed for real homeschool days, when you want something that works right now. They fit naturally alongside the other activities you’ll find in our collection of free printable alphabet worksheets, but with one clear goal instead of a whole stack of choices.
You can use these pages during quiet time, in a morning basket, or whenever your child is ready to sit and focus for a few minutes. Just print, grab a pencil, and let your preschooler practice matching letters in a way that feels manageable and doable.

Letter Printables At a Glance
Best for ages: 3–5
Prep: Just print
Skills practiced: Uppercase and lowercase matching, visual scanning, pencil control
Supplies needed: Pencil or crayon
Theme: Alphabet
Try this next: Alphabet Letter Recognition Worksheets
What’s Included in These Matching Worksheets
These preschool alphabet worksheets focus on one clear skill: matching uppercase and lowercase letters using a simple draw-a-line format. They’re designed for families who want focused letter practice without sorting through a big bundle or setting up extra activities.
- Draw-a-line pages that match uppercase letters to lowercase letters
- Simple black-and-white layout that’s easy to see and easy to print
- Low-prep design that works with a pencil or crayon
- Pages can be reused with page protectors or laminated if you like
- Built for short, focused practice sessions at home

How to Use These at Home
These pages work well as part of your regular routine or as a quick add-on when you need something simple. Like most free alphabet printables, they’re flexible and easy to fit into real homeschool days without extra prep or planning.
- Fine motor practice: Have your child draw the lines slowly, using a short pencil or crayon for better control
- Literacy focus: Say each letter name out loud before drawing the line to reinforce recognition
- Independent time: Set out one page for quiet table work while you help a sibling
- Simple extension: Match magnetic letters or foam letters after finishing the page
- Repeat use: Reprint favorite pages or use a page protector with a dry-erase marker

Skills Your Preschooler is Practicing
These worksheets focus on early literacy skills that preschoolers build best through short, consistent practice. Like many free preschool printables, they’re meant to support learning without adding pressure or extra planning to your day.
- Letter recognition through matching uppercase and lowercase letters
- Visual scanning as your child looks across the page to find matches
- Hand-eye coordination while drawing controlled lines
- Pencil control using simple, purposeful strokes
- Early literacy confidence as letter connections start to make sense

More Printables Like This
If your child is enjoying letter matching, it helps to keep building skills in small, steady steps. These printable activities work well together and give you a few easy options to rotate through during the week.
Alphabet Printables
- Printable Tracing Worksheets Alphabet Mini-Book
- Alphabet Writing Practice
- Matching Alphabet Worksheets for Kindergarten
- Animal Alphabet Book
- Dinosaur Alphabet Printables
Reader Favorites
- What Order to Teach the Alphabet to Preschoolers
- 5 Common Mistakes to Avoid When Teaching the Alphabet
Print your letter matching pages here.
Just print and you’re ready to go.
Matching letters doesn’t need to be complicated to be effective. These draw-a-line worksheets give your preschooler clear, focused practice while fitting easily into your day. A few minutes at the table is often all it takes to build confidence with uppercase and lowercase letters.

Tara is the brains behind Homeschool Preschool, where her journey from preschool and public school teacher to homeschooling mom of three fuels her passion for early childhood education. With a blend of expertise and firsthand experience, Tara’s writings offer practical tips and engaging resources to support families in creating meaningful learning adventures at home.


Thank you
Happy to help!
Thanks
You are very welcome! Enjoy!
Thank you. I have a 4 year old grandson about to start kindergarten in August! He needs to know how to write his name atleast. He knows the alphabet and numbers but not good at writing them yet.
Hello, love your worksheets. Very thoughtful contribution to mothers and teachers All over the world.
Agreed! My son is struggling first year at school, Covid and moved school half way during year! these are going to be so helpful! Thank you for making them available for us xx