Evidence-based curriculum for ages 2-8

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40+ Spring Activities for Kids: Ideas for Inside & Outside

Get loads of ideas for having fun with kids this spring! We’re sharing indoor activities for rainy days and outdoor adventures to enjoy when the sun is shining.

Spring has sprung, which means unpredictable weather and a need for fun spring activities to enjoy indoors and out, depending on the weather. When raindrops start falling, pick from our list of simple and imaginative activities to try inside, and when the weather cooperates, head outside with our list of creative ways to explore and play in nature.

A mother and daughter having fun in the spring rain together.

Looking for spring craft ideas? We’ve got you covered! Check out our list of spring crafts for kids that are made from household craft supplies.

Cotton balls glued onto blue cloud cutouts to create a simple indoor cloud-watching craft activity for kids, with extra cotton and a glue stick on a white background.

If it’s too chilly to go outdoors, “watch the clouds” inside instead—with cotton balls!

Start by looking up different types of clouds (cumulus, stratus, etc.) and discussing the features unique to each one. Use images of them to make the shapes of different types of clouds with cotton balls and construction paper.

Then, have fun creating clouds in the shape of different animals or objects, and take turns guessing what they are.

Young child looking out a window at birds gathered around a backyard feeder during spring.

Visit a site like allaboutbirds.org and find out what birds nest in your area in the spring.

Listen to their songs to learn what they sound like (many birds have special spring songs they only sing during mating season).

Then, open a window or head outside to see if you can hear any of these feathered visitors in the wild.

Spring jokes and riddles for kids.

Brighten any spring day with a little laughter and silliness! Whether you’re on the go and need easy entertainment or just want to share a few giggles at home, these spring-themed jokes and riddles are sure to bring plenty of smiles.

With plants starting to grow and bloom, spring is an ideal time to work with seeds and planting. This activity transforms seeds and paper into a unique gift your child can share with others or plant in their very own garden. Get step-by-step written instruction here.

Expand Learning: Creating Silly Seed Paper easily ties into talking about or celebrating Earth Day. Use our Earth Day coloring pages and worksheets to guide conversations and learning.

Child using fingerprint painting to create pink flowers with green stems on white paper, with open paint containers nearby.

Pull out the fingerpaints to make this simple toddler craft. Use your fingerprint to make the petals of each flower. Line them up in a variety of colors, draw in the stems and leaves, and display your handmade artwork.

Child using fingerprint painting to create pink flowers with green stems on white paper, with open paint containers nearby.

Smiling child scooping seeds in a spring-themed sensory bin filled with pebbles, flowers, and butterfly toys.

Welcome the warmer months with a spring-themed sensory bin. Here are a few possibilities:

🦋 Dried rice dyed light green, large seeds like sunflower or pumpkin seeds, dried beans or lentils, small springtime animals like butterflies, lambs, etc., and cotton balls with a few drops of floral-scented essential oils

☁️ Blue water beads, shaving cream clouds, lightning bolts cut from craft foam, large beads in rainbow colors, scoops and measuring cups

🪏 Potting soil, small toy insects and worms, artificial flowers, shovels, pails, seeds, pebbles and rocks

Child’s hand holding a colorful SPRING acrostic poem decorated with small flower drawings on lined paper.

Choose a spring-related word (use our list of 250+ spring words for kids to help) and turn it into an acrostic, where the first word of each line starts with one letter of the word. Then use crayons, paint, or markers to illustrate it, drawing the word S-P-R-I-N-G along the side of your poem. Here’s an example:

Soft warm days full of

Puddle-jumping and

Running through the flowers.

I leave my sweaters behind …

No more snowboots or mittens when I

Go outside to play!

Free spring coloring pages for kids from ABCmouse.com.

Our spring coloring pages are full of flowers, baby chicks, little lambs, and other springtime symbols. Color the ones you like and cut them out, then string them along a ribbon or some yarn for a fresh new decoration to hang across a window or mantel, above a doorway, or along a wall.

ABCmouse #1 learning app for kids!

The Four Season Song

This catchy tune helps children learn about the four seasons. They can watch or sing along or simply enjoying listening to it while coloring or playing.

Splish Splash Dance in the Rain

Kids can dance along with ABCmouse, pretending to splash in puddles and dance in the rain, complete with “splishes” and “splashes!”

Young child lying on a stack of pillows, pretending to relax in a cozy indoor bird nest made from blankets and cushions.

This is the time of year when birds get busy making nests to raise their young. How would you build a nest? Gather sticks and other nature items and make a small model nest for birds.

Or, think bigger and make a “nest” for people-sized birds from blankets, pillows, etc. Settle down in your nest and play a game of pretend as you sit on your “eggs” and raise your little chicks, or simply use your nest as a cozy spot to read, play, or learn with ABCmouse.

Four children making rainstorm sounds with household items like a bottle of rice, a metal bowl, and a cardboard tube during a spring activity.

Kids can create the sounds of rainstorm using everyday household items while exploring different sounds and rhythms.

This is an ideal activity for groups of children, families, and classrooms, where each child can contribute to the sound of the storms with the ideas below.

DIY Storm Tips:

Mother holding her young child while they look out a window together, observing signs of spring outside.

What are the signs of spring where you live? When the days are finally longer than the nights? When the snow all melts away? When migrating birds appear? Keep an eye out for the obvious and subtle signs of spring as they appear, and make a list, noting the date of each observation. In the years to come, you can compare the dates and see if spring is early, late, or right on time!

Colorful illustration of kids jumping on a hill in the spring time.

These fun and playful spring poems are perfect for toddlers, preschoolers, and beyond and celebrate the animals and natural beauty of the season. Young children will especially enjoy the goofy rhyming poems! These are great for reading at bedtime or while sitting outside enjoying the weather.

Father and young boy looking at a spring-themed diorama with cotton cloud rain, flowers, and small animal figures.

Grab an empty cardboard box and make a classic kid craft: the diorama! Use small toys, pictures, figures made from modeling clay, and other items to create a spring scene.

Here are a few ideas of what you can show in your diorama:

🌸 The first flowers blooming as a family takes a walk

🐦 Birds raising their young

🌧️ Rainclouds making the flowers bloom

🐶 Animals enjoying a rainy day

Child sorting and counting dried beans on a bright yellow surface for a hands-on spring math activity.

Use dried beans or lentils or flower seeds (old seed packets are great for this) for a hands-on math activity. Pour out your seed packets or a package of assorted dried beans and lentils.

Work with your child to sort the beans or seeds according to appearance or size and then count out how many of each type you have.

A child drawing a rainbow with window paint on a glass window.

Pick up some washable window markers and during the next rainstorm, invite your child to trace the path of the raindrops landing on the windows. Or they can use the markers to create the sunny spring scene they’ll see after the rain passes.

Fun magic leprechaun rocks craft for kids from ABCmouse.com.

Create a little St. Patrick’s Day magic with Magical Leprechaun Rocks! These fun and easy-to-make rocks fizz and dissolve, revealing hidden treasures inside. It’s the perfect blend of creativity and science, making for an exciting and hands-on holiday activity.

Flowers dipped in paint and used for creating fun spring activity for kids.

Head out to the backyard and pick some flowers and leaves from plants that are plentiful, such as dandelions. Add some paint to a paper plate and gently dip the flower heads into the paint and then stamp them onto paper, seeing what kind of print they create. For leaves, it may work best to apply the paint to them with a paint brush and then stamp it onto the paper.

A childe painting egg carton pieces into bugs for fun spring activity for kids.

Turn an empty egg carton into an adorable caterpillar by cutting out a row from the egg carton and painting each section. Let it dry and then add googly eyes, a smile, and pipe cleaner antennae. Or, cut out each section of an egg carton and turn them into ladybugs or trim the edges to create flowers.

Outdoor Spring Activities for Kids

A child smelling a beautiful flower.

Whether outside in a garden or in the flower section of the grocery store, invite your child to smell the flowers, noting which ones have a strong fragrant smell and which ones have a more subtle scent. For an added challenge, have your child close their eyes during this activity to see if they can pick up more nuances of each flower’s smell. 

Small handmade raft made of twigs and red string with a paper sail, floating in a shallow stream for a spring outdoor activity.

Gather sticks, bark, or leaves and use simple materials like twine to put them together into small rafts or boats. If you’d like, create a sail with a stick and sheet of scrap paper or fabric scrap. Then find a big puddle or (even better) a flowing stream, and sail your creations together.

Wooden wind chimes hanging from a tree branch outdoors on a breezy spring day.

While you can’t see the wind directly, you can certainly hear it, especially when you hang some wind chimes! Buy or DIY a set and try hanging them in different places around your yard. See what your child can observe, and ask them when and where the chimes are the loudest or what causes them to make noise.

Brainstorm ways to create your own chimes, such as hanging empty cans, sticks of different sizes, old keys, nails and screws of different sizes, or small bells.

Free printable flower coloring pages for kids from ABCmouse.com.

Print out our free printable flower coloring pages and pack up a lap desk or clipboard and some crayons, markers, or colored pencils. Head to a park or public garden and use inspiration from the flowers around you to color in the flowers of the coloring pages. As your child colors, make note of the real flowers you see that look similar to those they colored.

A child holding a worm in front of her nose looking at it up close.

Dig up a small patch of soil or find worms after it rains. Place them in a clear container with damp soil and watch them move! Talk about how worms help gardens grow by loosening the soil. After observing, gently return them to nature.

Mother and young child sitting under a tree reading a book together during a spring picnic outdoors.

Choose a favorite springtime book or two (try Kate Messner’s Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt or the Robert McCloskey classic, Make Way For Ducklings). Pack a picnic full of seasonal treats like fresh berries, rhubarb pie, or fresh spring peas, and find a sunny spot to enjoy the warmer weather. After you eat, relax by reading aloud the spring-themed books you brought along!

Small bird carrying twigs in its beak to build a nest during spring.

Birds gather a variety of materials to build their nests, depending on the species. You can help them out by providing bird-safe materials like small twigs and sticks, pet fur (as long as it hasn’t been treated with flea powder or other medications), leaves, bits of straw, grass clippings, feathers, plant fluff (from milkweed or thistle, for example), moss, or bark strips.

Spread them along shrubbery, leave them in small piles in your yard, or stuff them into an empty suet feeder cage hung from a branch, and watch as the birds take what they need.

A jar of water with measurements written on it collecting rain water for a fun spring activity.

Set up a rain gauge using a clear plastic bottle with marked measurements. Each day after it rains, measure how much rainwater has been collected. Keep a rain journal and track how different days get more or less rain. Compare with weather reports to see if the predictions were correct.

A young family on a nature walk.

Practice observation skills and appreciating nature with a walk outdoors. Watch out for wildlife, such as birds, squirrels, and rabbits, and discuss their behavior and what they may be doing. Look for plants with leaves just beginning to unfurl or flowers starting to bloom.

Talk to your child about how these are all signs of spring. Repeat the walk a few weeks later and talk about the changes that happened since your last stroll.

Toad resting inside a small terra cotta pot used as a homemade toad house in a garden.

Sunny warm days bring out all the spring peepers and American toads! Welcome them to your garden with a homemade toad house, which protects them from hot sun and predators.

One of the easiest ways is to turn a small terra cotta pot on its side, burying it part way in the soil. (If you like, you can paint or decorate your pot first.) Pile up some small flat rocks inside and around the entrance, and add some moss or tree bark too. Peek inside from time to time to see if you have any new residents!

Young child looking through a magnifying glass at a snail.

Walk through your yard with your child looking for a plant that’s just beginning to sprout. Use a ruler or tape measure to record the date and the plant’s size. Check back every day (or when you have time) and record the plant’s height, noting how much it’s grown and any other changes your child notices.

Children's plastic dinosaur toys in a garden.

Encourage creativity by setting up a mini-world in a planter, small corner of the yard, or even a large tray. Gather sticks, pebbles, moss, and flowers to build tiny houses, paths, and ponds for fairies or dinosaurs. Kids can add small toys, paint rocks to look like stepping stones, or create little storylines about their enchanted world. 

Young child touching and examining pine needles on a tree branch during a spring sensory walk.

As you enjoy the warm spring weather, take note of what you can see, smell, hear, touch, and even taste! For an extra challenge, wear a blindfold or cover your ears to force your other senses to observe more carefully (stay still while blindfolded or have an adult or friend guide you). Keep a running list as you walk along, and remember not to eat or touch anything unfamiliar, as it could be toxic.

Parent and young child in rain jackets observing puddles along a country path during a spring walk.

Don’t let a gentle spring rain keep you cooped up! Instead, grab your umbrellas and stroll through the showers. As you walk, take note of where puddles are most likely to appear. Ask kids to think about what those places have in common (hint: they’re usually lower than the surrounding areas). Then, take the same walk the next day and see which puddles have dried up and which are still going strong.

Parent and young child in rain jackets observing puddles along a country path during a spring walk.

Parent and child in rain jackets smiling while holding a colorful watercolor painting made in the rain during a spring activity.

Grab some magic markers and heavy paper and doodle up a storm. Then, set your drawings out in a drizzle for a few minutes. The colors will run and bleed, creating entirely new pictures!

Experiment with different color blends and patterns to see how the rain affects them, and try picking up the paper while it’s wet to see if the colors shift and move.

A child holding a little spring plant in her hands replanting it with her mom for this spring activity.

Choose easy-to-grow plants like sunflowers, lettuce, or herbs and let kids get their hands dirty planting seeds. Use this as a learning opportunity to discuss what plants need to grow (sunlight, water, soil). Make it fun by keeping a growth chart where your child can measure and draw pictures of how their plants change over time. Decorate plant markers with painted rocks or craft sticks to personalize the garden.

A child coloring in chalk outside for a fun spring activity.

Grab your chalk and head outdoors to the sidewalk or driveway. Explain to your children that they’ll be creating their very own spring-themed comic strip outside. Begin by brainstorming things that make them think of spring, such as flowers, birds, and rabbits. Then, use the squares of the sidewalk (or create your own) to contain each frame of the comic strip and see what the children come up with!

A young child picking strawberries in this fun spring activity idea.

If strawberries are in season in your area, visit a local farm and let kids experience picking their own fresh fruit. Talk about how strawberries grow, from flower to fruit, and why bees are important for pollination. Once home, use the fresh berries for a fun cooking activity, like making homemade strawberry shortcake, smoothies, or a fruit salad.

A child's legs with rain boots jumping in puddles for a fun spring activity for kids.

Spring is known for its rain storms. The next time one rolls through, put on rain boots and splash around in puddles! Make it more fun by counting how many puddles you can find or measuring which puddle makes the biggest splash. You can even bring out sidewalk chalk and draw around puddles to see if they change shape or disappear as you splash around them.

Child completing a spring scavenger hunt by collecting sticks and leaves to match drawings of nature items in a cardboard box.

Make a list of springtime sights like blooming flowers, leaf buds, bunnies, butterflies, bees, birds, and puddles. Kids can explore the yard, park, or neighborhood to find and check off each item.

A fun mud garden activity for kids.

Get ready for a mess but one that’s so much fun to make! After it rains, gather up some old spoons and plastic plates and bowls. Change into old play clothing and gardening gloves and head outside. Tell your child the backyard has turned into a Nature Kitchen and they can use the mud, twigs, leaves, and flowers as their ingredients to create meals that Mother Nature would love!

A child playing with giant bubbles in a field in this fun Kindergarten STEM activity.

The return of spring means it’s time to blow bubbles again! Instead of relying on the wands that come with bubble solution, try making your own instead. Experiment with pipe cleaners, flexible wire, or string and yarn to see if you can make a wand that works even better than the originals. You can also try mixing up your solution from liquid dish soap and water.

A child doing a spring scavenger hunt in this fun spring activity for kids.

Wear all the beauty of spring! Before you head out on a nature stroll, make a bracelet from masking tape with the sticky side turned out. As you walk, keep an eye out for flowers, leaves, and other springtime items that you can stick to your bracelet.

  • Fun and simple letter N crafts and activities for toddlers and preschoolers from ABCmouse.com.

    Letter N Crafts and Activities

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  • Fun and simple letter m crafts for toddlers and preschoolers from ABCmouse.com.

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  • Fun letter L craft and activity ideas for preschoolers and toddlers from ABCmouse.com.

    Letter L Crafts and Activities

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  • Simple letter K crafts for preschoolers and kindergarteners from ABCmouse.com.

    Letter K Crafts and Activities

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