Run your own bingo game with a free online caller. Spin the wheel to draw numbers without repeats — works for 75-ball, 90-ball, and 100-ball formats.
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Bingo only needs three things to work: cards, a way to draw numbers, and someone to call them out. This wheel handles the second and third parts. It draws random numbers from your chosen range, displays them in a big readable font, and keeps a running log of everything called so far. No download, no app, no sign-up — just open the page and start a game in seconds.
It works for classroom bingo, retirement-home bingo, charity nights, kids' parties, virtual game nights, baby showers, and corporate icebreakers. Whatever your variant, set the range, enable no-replacement, and spin. The wheel adapts to any group size and any bingo format you can imagine.
US bingo uses 75 balls on a 5x5 card. Columns are labeled B-I-N-G-O, and each column draws from a specific block of 15 numbers. To match that on the wheel, set the range to 1-75 and just announce both the letter and the number when calling (the letter is determined by the number's column).
UK bingo uses 90 balls on a 3x9 card. Each card has 15 numbers across three rows, and players win by completing one row, two rows, or the whole card depending on the round. Set the range to 1-90 for this format. Other variants exist — 30-ball speed bingo, 80-ball Internet bingo, and themed party games — and the wheel adapts to any of them by simply changing the range.
Real bingo balls go into a cage and stay out once drawn. The wheel mimics that by removing each drawn number from the pool, ensuring no number can repeat within a single game. This is critical for fair play: if 42 could come up twice, players who already marked 42 would gain nothing from the second call while waiting players might miss the announcement of a number they need.
The wheel defaults to no-replacement on this page because that is what bingo requires. If you accidentally switch it off, just toggle it back before continuing the game. Use the Reset button between games to refill the full pool of numbers for a fresh round.
Good bingo calling has a rhythm. Spin, announce clearly, pause a beat for players to check their cards, then spin again. Most callers leave around five seconds between numbers, which is enough for slower markers without dragging the pace and losing the energy of the room.
If anyone shouts bingo, pause the wheel and verify the winning card against the called-numbers log displayed below the wheel. A clear log prevents disputes — every number on the winning card must appear in the log, and the timing of the call must come before the next number is drawn. With everything visible to all players, especially on a shared screen during a video call, disputes are rare and easy to resolve when they do come up.
Bingo is one of the most adaptable party games ever invented. Word bingo replaces numbers with vocabulary terms, useful for classroom drilling. Music bingo uses song snippets instead of numbers, and players mark off tracks they recognize. Movie bingo plays during a film, with squares marked off when tropes occur. The caller wheel still works for variants — just label the wheel slices with your custom terms instead of numbers, using the generic List Picker if you need full text.
For traditional number bingo, the wheel keeps things fast, fair, and visible. It also removes the awkwardness of one person staring into a bingo cage while everyone else waits — the whole table watches the spin together, which keeps the energy up between numbers and turns every draw into a shared moment of suspense.