Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Best Free iPad Apps for Teachers and Classrooms in 2026

If you're a teacher with an iPad or managing a classroom set of iPads, you already know the App Store can be overwhelming. There are thousands of "educational" apps, and sorting the genuinely useful ones from the bloated, subscription-locked, or just mediocre takes time most teachers don't have.

This is my curated list of the best free iPad apps for teachers and students in 2026 — apps I'd actually recommend based on real classroom use cases. I've organized them by category so you can jump straight to what you need.

Quick note on "free": All apps listed here have a genuinely useful free tier. Some offer paid upgrades, but the free version is meaningful and functional on its own.


Digital Storytelling and Creative Projects

1. Book Creator (Free)

Book Creator is one of the most versatile creative tools in education. Students can create illustrated ebooks, comic books, digital reports, and portfolios combining text, images, audio, video, and drawing. The free plan allows one book library with up to 40 books — plenty for a classroom.

Best for: Grades K–12, any subject, project-based learning, digital portfolios

2. Clips (Free — Apple)

Apple Clips is a wonderfully simple video creation app that lets students record, add captions, music, and effects, and share short videos. It's approachable for even young students and produces polished results. Fully free, no subscriptions.

Best for: Video storytelling, book reports, presentations, grades 2–12

3. iMovie (Free — Apple)

For more serious video editing, iMovie on iPad is a powerful tool that's already on most school iPads. The Magic Movie feature (added in recent updates) auto-assembles a video from selected clips — great for students who are new to editing. Students who master iMovie on iPad can transition to Final Cut Pro later.

Best for: Video projects, film class, storytelling, grades 4–12


Note-Taking and Organization

4. Notability (Free with Limitations)

Notability allows handwriting, typed notes, PDF annotation, audio recording synced to notes, and more. The free plan limits you to 3 notes (with unlimited editing of those), which is restrictive for students — but it's fantastic for teachers to evaluate before committing.

Best for: Teachers, older students, Apple Pencil users

5. Apple Notes (Free — Built-in)

Often overlooked, the built-in Notes app in iPadOS has become genuinely excellent. It supports Apple Pencil, tables, checklists, scanned documents, collaborative notes, and with iOS 18/iPadOS 18 it now has math solving built in (write an equation and it calculates it). For students who need a free, reliable note-taking app, Notes is often the best answer.

Best for: All ages, quick note-taking, math notes, K–12


Assessment and Formative Checking

6. Kahoot! (Free)

Kahoot! remains one of the most engaging classroom assessment tools available. Create quiz games students join with a code on their iPads, competing in real time. The free tier for teachers includes unlimited kahoots and basic reporting. It's loud, energetic, and students genuinely enjoy it.

Best for: Review sessions, formative assessment, all grades

7. Quizlet (Free)

Quizlet provides digital flashcards and study sets that students can create or use from millions of existing sets. The free tier includes study modes, flashcards, and collaborative sets. It's particularly powerful for vocabulary, foreign language, science terms, and any content-heavy subject.

Best for: Vocabulary, language arts, science, social studies, grades 5–12

8. Nearpod (Free)

Nearpod transforms presentations into interactive lessons. Teachers share a lesson code; students follow along on their iPads and respond to embedded polls, quizzes, drawing activities, and more. The free plan allows up to 30 students per lesson and 50 MB of storage — enough to get started with custom lessons.

Best for: Interactive lessons, formative assessment, whole-class instruction


Reading and Literacy

9. Epic! (Free for Educators)

Epic! is a digital library with over 40,000 books, audiobooks, and learning videos for kids up to age 12. It's free for classroom use with a teacher account — students get free access during school hours using a class code, and parents can subscribe for home access. This one is a genuine gem for elementary educators.

Best for: Reading, K–5, classroom libraries, independent reading time

10. Seesaw (Free)

Seesaw is a student portfolio and communication platform where students document their learning through photos, videos, drawings, and text. Parents can see what their child is working on via the connected app. The free teacher plan covers the essential features and is one of the best tools for early elementary learning documentation.

Best for: Portfolios, family communication, K–5, special education


Creativity and Visual Arts

11. Canva for Education (Free)

Canva for Education is completely free for K–12 teachers and students when accessed through an education account. Students can create presentations, posters, infographics, social media graphics, and more using professionally designed templates. It's a design tool that removes the barriers — students focus on content, not layout.

Best for: Presentations, visual projects, all grades, cross-curricular

12. Procreate Pocket (Paid, but worth noting)

Procreate Pocket ($4.99) deserves a mention even though it's not free — it's a one-time purchase and one of the best drawing apps available. For art classes or schools with Apple Pencils, it's an outstanding tool. The full Procreate app for iPad is $12.99, also one-time, no subscription.


Coding and STEM

13. Swift Playgrounds (Free — Apple)

Swift Playgrounds teaches coding concepts through interactive puzzles and challenges, and can also be used to write real Swift and SwiftUI code. It's free, works without an account, and is one of Apple's best educational apps. Apple also offers free Everyone Can Code curriculum that pairs with it.

Best for: Computer science, grades 5–12, coding electives

14. Scratch (Free — via Browser)

Scratch by MIT doesn't have a dedicated iPad app, but works well in Safari on iPad. Students create interactive stories, games, and animations using a block-based coding interface. It's the most widely-used coding platform in education worldwide and has a massive library of student-created projects for inspiration.

Best for: Coding introduction, grades 2–8, STEM projects


Teacher Productivity

15. Google Classroom (Free)

If your school uses Google Workspace for Education, Google Classroom is likely already in your workflow. The iPad app is solid for distributing assignments, collecting student work, grading, and communicating with students and parents. It integrates seamlessly with Docs, Slides, Drive, and Forms.

16. GoodNotes 6 (Free tier available)

GoodNotes 6 introduced a free tier that allows 3 notebooks. For teachers using an Apple Pencil to annotate lesson materials, grade papers, or take meeting notes, it's one of the smoothest note-taking experiences on iPad. The handwriting feels natural and the PDF annotation tools are excellent.


Getting Started Tips

  • Use Apple School Manager if your school deploys iPads — it lets IT push apps to student devices without students needing Apple IDs
  • Create a folder structure on your own iPad to stay organized: Subject Apps, Assessment Tools, Student Favorites
  • Most apps have teacher tutorial videos on YouTube — 10 minutes of preparation before introducing an app to students saves a lot of classroom time
  • Apple's own education page has free resources, lesson plans, and professional development for educators using iPads

Conclusion

The best free iPad apps for teachers aren't necessarily the ones with the biggest marketing budgets — they're the ones that are reliable, intuitive for students, and genuinely reduce your workload rather than adding to it. Start with one or two from this list, get comfortable with them, and build from there.

Are there apps you swear by in your classroom that aren't on this list? Share them in the comments — I update this list regularly and love discovering what's working for other educators.