Create Bingo Cards Online

Customize a printable bingo card, start from a template, or prepare an online game.

Card planning guide

How to make a bingo card that is ready to use

The editor handles the grid and layout, but the useful part is choosing squares that match the people, setting, and length of the game. Plan those details before you print or share the card.

1

Choose a grid

Use 3×3 for a short activity, 4×4 for a medium-length game, or 5×5 for a traditional card with more variety.

2

Add the squares

Type your own words, start from a template, use AI suggestions, or add image cells after signing in.

3

Check the finished card

Preview the layout, shorten crowded text, decide whether a free space fits the game, and correct anything players could misread.

4

Choose how people will play

Export one PDF or PNG card on the free plan, or use a paid batch, player link, or hosted live game when a group needs separate cards.

Choose the right grid and free space

3×3: nine compact squares for younger groups, warmups, and games that should finish quickly.

4×4: a middle option for classroom review, workshops, and parties that need more variety without a long round.

5×5: the traditional format for larger idea lists, longer events, and groups using unique shuffled cards.

Free space: use it when the game should move faster; turn it off when every marked square should come from a called item or observed event.

Printable cards and online games are different

An individual PDF or PNG is best when everyone can use the same layout or when you only need one example card.

A printable batch creates separate shuffled cards so a classroom, party, or event group does not all receive the same layout.

Player links let people mark cards from a phone, tablet, or laptop. Hosted live games add controls for the person running the round.

Compare free and paid options

Start from a useful example

Use an example as a starting list, then make the wording specific to your players instead of publishing a generic card unchanged.

Bingo card creator FAQ

Can I create a bingo card for free?

Yes. A free account can save one card and export an individual PDF or PNG. Printable batches, player links, and hosted live games are paid group tools.

Can I make an image bingo card?

Yes. After signing in, you can add an image to a cell and mix image cells with ordinary text squares on the same card.

Which bingo card sizes are available?

The editor supports 3×3, 4×4, and 5×5 grids. Smaller grids are useful for younger players or quick rounds, while 5×5 gives a longer game and more square variety.

How do I make unique cards for a group?

Build one source card, then use a paid batch pack or Premium access to shuffle the same square list into separate printable cards.

What is the difference between sharing and hosting?

A player link lets someone mark a card in a browser. A hosted live game adds the host controls used to call items and manage a group session.

Can I start from a template?

Yes. Browse the template library or open one of the event guides, then replace any suggested square with wording that fits your players.