How to Use a Schulte Table

A Schulte table trains focus and peripheral vision by having you find numbers 1 to 25 in order, fast. Here is how to use one and improve your time.

Updated 5 min read By CodingEagles
Free tool Schulte Table Find 1 to 25 in order as fast as you can — a focus and vision drill. Open tool

A Schulte table is a grid of numbers in random order — usually 1 to 25 on a five-by-five grid — that you work through in sequence as fast as you can. It started as a tool for studying attention and is now a favourite of speed-reading practice, because doing it well depends on the same wide, steady gaze that fast reading relies on.

The point is your gaze, not your eyes darting

The instinct is to scan the whole grid, hunting for the next number by moving your eyes everywhere. That is exactly what the exercise trains you out of. The aim is to fix your gaze near the centre and find each number using your peripheral vision, the part of your sight that takes in everything around your focus point. A soft, central gaze widens how much you can register at once, which is the skill speed readers want: seeing groups of words rather than reading one at a time.

That is why a good Schulte table has a central marker. Keeping your eyes on it, rather than chasing numbers around the grid, is the whole drill.

How to improve your time

  • Hold the centre. Resist the urge to dart. Let the numbers come to you from the edges of your vision.
  • Relax your gaze. A wide, soft focus takes in more than a tense, narrow one. Tension shrinks your effective field of view.
  • Practise short and often. A few runs a day builds the habit faster than occasional long sessions, and your times settle lower over a couple of weeks.

Do not be discouraged by how unnatural it feels at first. Finding numbers without looking straight at them is a trained skill, and the early awkwardness fades.

A note on expectations

A Schulte table genuinely trains focus and peripheral awareness, and it pairs well with real reading practice. It is not a magic route to doubling your reading speed on its own, but as one part of a wider habit it helps build the wide visual span that faster reading needs.

Try it yourself

The Schulte table here drops numbers 1 to 25 into a grid and times you from your first tap, with a central dot to anchor your gaze. Keep your eyes on the dot, work in order, and watch your time fall as the wide-gaze habit takes hold.

Frequently asked questions

What is a good Schulte table time?
Clearing a 5×5 table in under about 30 seconds is strong, and practice brings it down. Times vary a lot between people, so compare against your own previous runs.
Do Schulte tables actually improve reading speed?
They train a wider visual span and steadier focus, which support faster reading. They are one exercise among many rather than a shortcut on their own.
Why should I keep my eyes in the centre?
The drill is meant to make you find numbers with your peripheral vision rather than scanning around. A soft, central gaze widens the area you take in at once.

Ready to try it?

Find 1 to 25 in order as fast as you can — a focus and vision drill. Free, in-browser, and 100% private — your data never leaves your device.

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