Free · Print-ready in minutes
Team Building Bingo Card Generator
Build a free printable team building bingo card in 30 seconds. The squares are built for real connection, not forced small talk, so it works for kickoffs, offsites, and new-hire weeks.
Meaningful connection and recognition, not just small talk.
Preview: this is exactly what prints
Team Building Bingo
Meaningful connection and recognition, not just small talk.
How it works
Team building bingo turns an icebreaker into a card everyone races to finish. Here is the 30-second version:
- 1. Choose your grid. 3×3 for a quick week, 4×4, or a classic 5×5 with a free center square.
- 2. Shuffle the squares until the mix fits your team.
- 3. Add your company name (optional) and tweak the title.
- 4. Enter your email and we send the printable PDF. Free, no watermark.
Want your team to actually play it?
A printed card runs on the honor system, so there's no way to see who's playing or whether it worked. KilterUp turns the same card into a digital challenge: employees tap squares on their phones, you get a live leaderboard, completion tracking, celebrations, and an engagement report you can forward to your boss. One-time pricing from $99. No subscription, no demo, no contract.
FAQ
What is team building bingo?
A bingo card where each square is a small connection or teamwork prompt: find a coworker who runs, give someone recognition, learn a teammate’s hobby. People complete squares over a day or a few weeks and race for a line or a full card.
What squares should a team building bingo card have?
Mix quick wins (introduce yourself to someone new) with deeper ones (recognize a teammate’s work, learn what someone does outside work). The Team Building theme here loads a balanced set you can shuffle.
Can I use it for a remote or virtual team?
Yes. Most squares work over Slack or video. For a fully remote team, shuffle out the in-person squares, or run it as a digital KilterUp challenge so everyone taps squares on their phone.
How do I run team building bingo with my team?
Print a card per person, set a deadline (a day, a week, or a whole sprint), and offer a small prize for the first line or blackout. To track who is playing and who won automatically, run it as a real KilterUp challenge.