Letter H Tracing Worksheet – Free Printables

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Grab all of my kids letter H tracing worksheets here.

Each individual printable worksheet is free and you can select from the variations below. These worksheets can help children learn the alphabet and build fine motor skills.

The variations below include upper case and lower case ‘Hh’ versions for a variety of practice as well as common H words for early learners including hat, hand, and horse.

All worksheets are designed to be printed on A4 paper. Make sure you select “shrink to fit” in order to ensure best quality output from your printer.

License and Terms of Use: All printables are provided for non-commercial personal and classroom use only, not for resale or distribution. All rights reserved.

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Free Letter H Tracing Worksheets

pre-k h letter tracing worksheet

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printable h dot tracing worksheet

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h dot tracing worksheet

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h sentence writing worksheet

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h letter handwriting practice worksheet

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free letter H tracing printable

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Tracing Letter H

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free capital H tracing printable

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Letter H Tracing Printable

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Tracing Letter H Printable

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Tracing Letter H Worksheet

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> Back to List of All Letters

The Next Worksheets you’ll Need

How to Use These Worksheets

These worksheets follow a structured learning path. Our educational designers have created them so children can build tracing skills progressively.

We recommend you begin with the larger bubble-style tracing worksheets, which allow students to trace the letter H in a spacious, guided way, that doesn’t require refined fine motor skills.

As your child gains confidence, move them onto worksheets with smaller tracing lines, which will encourage more precision and help your child refine that fine motor ability.

Once they’re ready, we then recommend introducing blank writing lines without dotted letters. The idea here is to promote independent letter formation.

Finally, to build fluency, we recommend you incorporate worksheets that blend the letter H into simple words and sentences – we’ve provided several such worksheets above. Practicing with sentences introduces the concept of spacing between words, helping students get comfortable with writing full, simple sentences.

What to Teach Next

While you’re here, don’t forget to check out the other worksheets the talented teachers on our team have created. Here are a few ideas using some resources I’ve created on my website:

  1. Practicing with Simple Three-Letter Words
    Consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) words are some of the first words we teach to help kids sound out simple patterns and understand the concepts of words and reading. I’ve developed a collection of worksheets that focus on CVC words for you to use, where young learners can strengthen their skills in decoding and recognizing foundational words. Your child may be ready for this!
  2. Strengthening Sound Recognition
    Understanding the initial sounds of words is a core literacy skill at about this age level. Check out these beginner sounds worksheets where kids can focus on identifying the first sound of simple words. It’s a great way to support their phonemic awareness as they start connecting sounds to letters.
  3. Exploring Rhyming Families
    As your child develops the ability to structure words, they need to master the concept of word families. This helps kids recognize patterns in language and will help develop your child’s reading fluency. You can explore the rhyming word family worksheets I’ve designed on this page, which offer a variety of activities around groups of words like “-at” and “-op.”
  4. Building Vocabulary with Essential Words
    Sight words are essential for helping kids recognize common words instantly, making reading smoother. We generally rely on either the Fry or Dolch sight words sets, which present the most common sight words kids will come across. Check out my free set of flashcards for essential sight words that can be used for matching games such as Snap and Memory. These cards support word recognition and build your child’s literacy confidence.
  5. Learning the Alphabet with Visual Aids
    For letter recognition, I recommend using these alphabet flashcards designed for beginners, which are some of the most popular flashcards I’ve got on the website. They’re both colorful and engaging, helping kids recognize each letter in uppercase and lowercase. These can be used for games, matching exercises, or just as a quick review tool.
  6. Introducing Vocabulary Through Nouns and Verbs
    To help kids build a basic vocabulary, I created noun cards that teach everyday objects and verb flashcards focused on the top 52 verbs a child will know and be familiar with. These flashcards are a fun way to familiarize kids with parts of speech, and I love to use the verbs flashcards for acting-out games with my students.

These resources make literacy practice interactive and enjoyable, giving Pre-K and Kindergarten students a solid foundation as they build their reading and writing skills. Each worksheet and flashcard set is crafted to support early learners on their journey to becoming confident readers.

2 thoughts on “Letter H Tracing Worksheet – Free Printables”

  1. Hi, the first four PDFs on the page don’t have links to download the worksheet. The link isn’t broken. I think it’s just not there in the source. The rest of the worksheets download fine.

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