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5 fun spring break activities for kids you can do at home

Give your kids the ultimate spring break staycation with these fun activities

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A child doing a craft
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We all look forward to spring break. It’s a great time for school kids to recharge their batteries and for parents to get a break from making school lunches for a week! Although spring break trips are fun, travel isn’t always an option. If you’re looking at a week at home and are thinking of things to do with your kids, we’ve got you covered.

Staying at home doesn’t have to be boring — far from it! With these spring break activities for kids, you’re going to create family vacation memories without leaving town.

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Science experiments

Mama Belle and the kids / Shutterstock

When they’re home on vacation, it is the perfect time to try out those science-fair moments you remember from your childhood, like the baking soda volcano. Or, you can make some slime, see if you can put a pin through a piece of tape on a balloon without popping it, make a lava lamp, and (if you’re feeling really adventurous) stick some Mentos in a bottle of Coke.

You can look up countless experiments to do, but it’s also fun to just wing it and throw things together in your kitchen and see what happens. Have some basics on hand: Food coloring, vinegar, baking soda, soda, and vegetable oil.

Scavenger hunts

Group of kids at beginning a scavenger hunt
Robert Kneschke / Shutterstock

This is a classic, and there are many ways to do it depending on your kids’ ages and what’s available in and around your home. Want to get outside? Go to the backyard or a nearby park and have your kids check off nature items like pine cones or squirrels when they spot them. It doesn’t get any easier than writing up a quick list and sending them outside to run around with an activity to keep them occupied.

You could step it up a level by placing your own items from inside around the outdoor hunt space for them to collect in a bag and bring back in for you. Stuck indoors? The same ideas apply. Either have your kids mark on a piece of paper that they’ve seen certain items (something red, something with batteries, etc.) or have them collect the items and bring them back as proof of a successful hunt.

Virtual field trips

father and daughter watching a video together
fizkes / Shutterstock

Can’t go to an aquarium? Bring the aquarium to you! Choose a theme for each day of spring break and watch videos and do crafts related to the theme. For an underwater theme, you can take a virtual tour of an aquarium on YouTube, read books about fish, make a fish tank out of a cup, and break out some new bath toys.

Plan ahead with library book requests, and if your kids are old enough, you could even have them email professionals in the field (just use the contact form at a zoo’s website, for example) to ask questions. If you search online for “virtual field trips,” you’ll find endless options like the livestream of the Old Faithful geyser or the virtual field trip to Ellis Island. Many museums, like the National Museum of Natural History, has its own virtual tours available on their websites, so search around based on your child’s interests.

Indoor camping

Olga Pink / Shutterstock

It’s fort time! This is your chance for an indoor picnic and for imagination to run wild. Cook hot dogs and s’mores (on the stove), pretend to watch for animals while you play forest sounds, and have a no-TV or no-electronics rule. If you have sleeping bags or a tent, break them out of storage and go all out. Even without a real tent, this is a great opportunity to drape a blanket over some chairs to make one.

Plant a garden

child pushing a toy wheelbarrow filled with flowers
Polesie Toys / Pexels

If you have any outdoor space for a garden bed, take advantage of the warming weather and the time off to get a garden started outdoors. If you don’t have a yard, you can plant in a window box (depending on your housing situation, you can hang it out a window or rest it on a windowsill). If you live in a city, you can find an urban community garden for a plot, too.

No matter where you plant, let your kids take the lead in planning what they want to grow. Flowers? Herbs? Vegetables? Help them think about planning the seasons, choosing the colors, and learning about your local climate and native plants. They can take responsibility for watering them after the vacation is over and eventually enjoy the fruits of their labor.

Enjoy your staycation

A family having fun at the zoo.
Los Muertos Crew / Pexels

There are so many ways that families can still have a fun and memorable spring break without traveling or breaking the bank. Creating a fun staycation with any of the activities we’ve listed above can make your spring break fly by. Movie marathons, craft projects, and cooking new recipes together can also add excitement to the break.

Although most of us would love to travel for spring break, finances, work obligations, and many other reasons often make that unrealistic, but by embracing the time together and making the most of local opportunities, families can create lasting spring break memories without leaving home. Plan out a staycation the entire family will enjoy and you’re sure to make a memorable spring break that everyone will remember.

The idea behind all of these suggestions is to work with what you already have at home. Tap into your kids’ interests and let loose to explore with them. When you do, you’ll all have a fun spring break.

Sarah Prager
Former Contributor
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