Printable Dominoes
Sometimes you want dominoes away from a screen. A printable domino set is a sheet of tiles you print, cut out, and play with like the real thing. This page gives you a complete double-six set - all 28 tiles - drawn right below, plus the setup steps for playing at a real table. When you would rather just play, you can always play free in your browser instead.
Heads up: print this page and the sheet below comes out as a full 28-tile double-six set. Use your browser's print dialog (Ctrl+P or Cmd+P), keep the scale at 100%, and heavier paper makes sturdier tiles.
What a printable domino set is
A printable set is just the 28 tiles of a double-six set laid out on paper: every combination from the double blank up to the double six, each drawn once. Some people cut the tiles out and play with them directly. Others print a set to replace lost tiles from a real box, or to teach the tile values before a family game. Either way, the goal is the same, to put a working set in your hands with nothing but a printer and scissors.
Who wants a printable set
- Teaching kids. Paper tiles are cheap and replaceable, and cutting them out is half the fun before the first game.
- Playing offline. On a plane, a porch, or anywhere without a device, a printed set and a flat surface are all you need.
- Replacing lost tiles. A real set missing its 6-6 is unplayable. Print this page, cut out the tile you lost, and the box is whole again.
Print and cut your double-six set
Here is the full set - 28 tiles, every combination from 0-0 to 6-6. Print this page, then cut along the dark borders.
- Print at 100% scale so every tile comes out the same size.
- Use card stock or heavy paper if you can - thin paper curls and shows tiles through the back.
- Cut along the outer dark border of each tile. Keep the center line; it divides the two ends.
- Optional: laminate or tape-cover the tiles so they survive shuffling face down on a table.
How to set up a game with your printed set
Here is the classic two-player All Fives setup, the version most people mean when they say "dominoes with scoring". You need one double-six set of 28 tiles.
- Turn all 28 tiles face down and shuffle them by swirling with both hands.
- Each player draws 7 tiles and stands them on edge, hidden from the other player. This uses 14 tiles.
- Leave the remaining 14 tiles face down to the side as the boneyard.
- The player with the heaviest double sets it to start the line. The first double is the spinner.
- Take turns matching a tile to an open end. Score whenever the open ends total a multiple of five; draw from the boneyard when you cannot play.
- First player out collects the opponent's leftover pips, rounded to the nearest five. Play hands until someone reaches 100 points.
New to the rules? The full walkthrough for every game lives on the dominoes rules hub.
Domino setups at a glance
Different games use different deals. Here is how the most common ones start for two players.
| Game | Tiles per player | Boneyard | Play to |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Fives | 7 | 14 | 100, 150 or 250 points |
| Draw | 7 | 14 | First to go out |
| Fives and Threes | 9 | 10 | Exactly 61 points |
| Bergen | 6 | 16 | 15 points |
Or just play in your browser
No printer and no scissors handy? Every game shuffles and deals itself for you online, for free, with no download. Try All Fives, Draw, or Block and the site handles the shuffle, the deal, and the scoring for you.
Printable dominoes FAQ
Can I really print a working domino set from this page?
Yes. The sheet above contains all 28 tiles of a standard double-six set. Print at 100% scale, cut along the borders, and you can play any game on this site at a real table.
What size are the printed tiles?
The tiles print four to a row on a standard sheet, roughly the footprint of a large real-world domino. The exact size depends on your paper, but every tile on the sheet comes out identical, which is all a fair shuffle needs.
Can I teach kids dominoes with a printed set?
Yes. Paper tiles are perfect for learning: cheap, replaceable, and easy to spread out. Start with Draw or Block so kids learn matching first, then add All Fives scoring once the line-of-play idea clicks. The rules hub keeps every game in plain English.