Roman Numerals 1 to 100

    Every Roman numeral from I (1) to C (100) in one clean chart. Great for homework, classrooms, and quick reference.

    Roman Numerals 1 to 100

    NumberRoman Numeral
    1I
    2II
    3III
    4IV
    5V
    6VI
    7VII
    8VIII
    9IX
    10X
    11XI
    12XII
    13XIII
    14XIV
    15XV
    16XVI
    17XVII
    18XVIII
    19XIX
    20XX
    21XXI
    22XXII
    23XXIII
    24XXIV
    25XXV
    26XXVI
    27XXVII
    28XXVIII
    29XXIX
    30XXX
    31XXXI
    32XXXII
    33XXXIII
    34XXXIV
    35XXXV
    36XXXVI
    37XXXVII
    38XXXVIII
    39XXXIX
    40XL
    41XLI
    42XLII
    43XLIII
    44XLIV
    45XLV
    46XLVI
    47XLVII
    48XLVIII
    49XLIX
    50L
    51LI
    52LII
    53LIII
    54LIV
    55LV
    56LVI
    57LVII
    58LVIII
    59LIX
    60LX
    61LXI
    62LXII
    63LXIII
    64LXIV
    65LXV
    66LXVI
    67LXVII
    68LXVIII
    69LXIX
    70LXX
    71LXXI
    72LXXII
    73LXXIII
    74LXXIV
    75LXXV
    76LXXVI
    77LXXVII
    78LXXVIII
    79LXXIX
    80LXXX
    81LXXXI
    82LXXXII
    83LXXXIII
    84LXXXIV
    85LXXXV
    86LXXXVI
    87LXXXVII
    88LXXXVIII
    89LXXXIX
    90XC
    91XCI
    92XCII
    93XCIII
    94XCIV
    95XCV
    96XCVI
    97XCVII
    98XCVIII
    99XCIX
    100C

    Patterns to Memorise

    Once you know the seven base symbols (I, V, X, L, C, D, M), every number from 1 to 100 follows the same rules. Tens stack with X (XX = 20, XXX = 30), then switch to subtractive form for 40 (XL) and 90 (XC). Units repeat I (II, III), use IV for 4, V for 5, then VI–VIII, and IX for 9.

    Combine the tens and units to read any number under 100. For example, 47 = XL + VII = XLVII and 99 = XC + IX = XCIX. Once you have memorised the building blocks for the tens and the units you can construct or decode any value in this range without thinking.

    Need a Different Number?

    Use the Roman Numeral Converter for any value up to 3999, the Year Converter for years, or the Date Converter for full dates.