What do you do when you’ve run out of ideas to entertain your kids? Turn to a homemade Boredom Box. We’ve found the best ideas for things to do when the kids are bored, suitable for little ones all the way through to tweens. Whenever you hear the dreaded B word, all you need to do is pull out the box and let their imaginations do the rest. Choose one theme or mix and match these ideas to suit their interests.
Boredom Box Ideas for Preschoolers
Take I Spy to the Next Level
Fill a jar with sand or dirt – or even slime! – and drop in treasures like tiny toy animals, shells, beads or buttons. This is your I Spy Jar. Add a sheet of paper with clues to the different items and encourage kids to write down everything they can find. When the kids are ready to move on from the I Spy Jar, send them on a scavenger hunt. Start by creating their own binoculars, using two cardboard rolls, sticky tape and string. Then do an online search for an indoor or outdoor scavenger hunt, print out one you like, then set the kids off on a home adventure to find everything on the list.
What to Try
- PPS Cotton Twine Ball 80m
- Elmer's Slime Starter Kit
- Kadink Buttons Assorted 90 Pack
- Born Rectangle Kraft Box Large
- Kadink Merit Stickers 210 Pack Assorted Stars
- Kadink Holographic Sticker Sheet Star Design
- Kadink Dog Bubble Stickers
- Kadink Puffy Stickers Sealife 19 Pack
- Learning Can Be Fun Sticker Set Animal World 800 Pack
Craft Classics
Pipe-cleaner animals, popsicle-stick people and colour-by-numbers are always popular things to do when kids are bored. Include prompts like “make a stick person of everyone in your family”, to help give their creativity direction. Buying a big craft set is a great jumping-off point; divide it up into little bags so you can swap over the contents of the box to keep things interesting.
What to Try
- Kadink Jumbo Creations Craft Box
- Kadink Wooden Craft Sticks Natural 180 Pack
- Kadink Chenille Stems Bright 70 Pack
- Melissa & Doug Colour by Number Activity Book Blue
- Melissa & Doug Colour by Number Activity Book Pink
Improve Their Scissor Skills
Make craft staples, such as scissors and glue sticks, work harder by adding prompts and activities to the Boredom Box. Add sheets from an activity pad like Melissa & Doug Scissor Skills Active Pad or create a DIY version by printing out simple shapes your kids will recognise (try farm animals, like the chicken above, sea creatures or even vehicles). Get them to cut out extra features for the shape, such as feathers or eyes, to get their little fingers working and give kids’ scissor work purpose.
What to Try
SEE ALSO: 5 Easy Gravity Experiments for Preschoolers
Boredom Box Ideas for Young Primary Schoolers
Transform a Hallway Into an Obstacle Challenge
If you have bored kids who love Ninja Warrior, then they’ll love a hallway challenge in their Boredom Box – and thankfully it doesn’t involve rearranging the couch cushions. Buy some barricade tape or streamers and zigzag them high and low all the way down a hallway, or even in the garden, securing it with sticky tape. Kids have to make it through the course without touching the tape. Add a piece of paper to make a chart and even a timer so they can keep track of their PBs, and use fabric scraps to create bandanas and sweatbands. Playing the Mission Impossible theme tune is optional, but highly recommended.
What to Try
Boredom Box Meets Recycling Box
Smaller recyclable items are perfect for a Boredom Box. Little boxes become the foundations for a cardboard city, paper plates are whipped into shields and paper cups are brilliant for stacking into towers.
Send Them to “Work”
Playing shops never gets old and having a set of fake money makes creating a make-believe business more exciting – while flexing kids’ maths skills at the same time. Include cardboard to make the shop signage, print-outs of “products” they’d like to sell and even an old phone so they can make important business calls.
What to Try
SEE ALSO: How to Improve Handwriting for Kids of All Ages
Boredom Box Ideas for Upper Primary Schoolers
Mess-free Pottery
Using a pack of air-drying clay, bored kids can fashion anything from a pinch pot to a vase, Christmas ornaments, wind chimes and more. But our favourite idea? Creating their own chessboard. Include cardboard for them to create the chequered base and instructions on the pieces they need to make (in whatever shapes they like), as well as a print-out of the rules. Add black and white paint and old cutlery, straws or anything that will help them add texture to their clay. It’s a multi-part project that will keep them entertained for hours, with the bonus of learning a new game at the end.
What to Try
- Crayola Air Dry Clay White 1.13kg
- Kadink Air Drying Clay 1kg White
- Quill Canvas Board 250gsm White
- Studymate Recycled Plastic Ruler 30cm Clear
- Sharpie Fine Permanent Marker Black
- Kadink Washable Bright Poster Paint 500mL Black
- Kadink Washable Bright Poster Paint 500mL White
- Kadink Modelling Set 10 Pack
A Paper Fashion Parade
A pile of old newspapers, some elastic bands, tape and a few strips of aluminium foil are all the things kids need to make a hat or full outfit with shiny accessories. Paint will also help bring the outfits to life and add even more fun to the Boredom Box. You never know, you might have a budding designer on your hands!
What to Try
- J.Burrows No.64 Rubber Bands 100g Assorted
- Kadink Sensory Paint Tool Set 10 Pack
- Kadink Washable Bright Poster Paint 500mL Yellow
- Kadink Washable Bright Poster Paint 125mL x 4 Pack
- J.Burrows Recycled Clear Tape with Dispenser 18mmX25m
- Kadink Assorted Paintbrushes 15 Pack
Tabletop Forts
If imaginary play is their thing, fold up a big old sheet to put in the Boredom Box. Challenge them to make it into their fort/cubby/shop – maybe it’s an ice-cream van, a spaceship or a Lord of the Rings-style hobbit hut in a hill. Print out a handful of inspirational pictures to help jog some creative ideas. Once they’ve come up with the idea, they can throw the sheet over the kitchen table, a card table or even the couch, cut out windows and doors, colour it in (fabric markers are less messy than paint) and get cosy inside.
Boredom Box Ideas for Tweens
Create a Photo Journal
Looking for things to do when older kids are bored? Encourage tweens to journal their days with photos. A Fuji Instax camera is great for producing photos instantly that they can stick into the journal, or connecting a smartphone to your home printer also gives them the freedom to play with images. Add stickers and washi tape to the journal for decoration, and use old catalogues and magazines for collaging. Or get them to create their own photo book of friends, holidays or family.
What to Try
- Otto A5 Herringbone Notebook 192 Pages Navy
- Fujifilm Instax Mini 12 Instant Camera Pastel Blue
- Crayola Colour & Sticker Book Bluey
- Otto Washi Tape Blue 8 Pack
- Otto Washi Tape Yellow 8 Pack
- Otto Washi Tape Green 8 Pack
Make a Comic Book, Newspaper or Magazine
Fill the box with everything they need to make a comic book, newspaper or magazine – paper, markers, textas and more. It could be a project they work on over the week that they can scan and make prints of to send to family and friends.
What to Try
- Kadink Construction Paper A4 Assorted 500 Pack
- Kadink A3 Butchers Paper Pad
- Keji Coloured Markers 12 Pack
- Studymate Jumbo Coloured Markers 12 Pack
- Studymate Safety Scissors 5"/127mm
- Keji Glue 35g 2 Pack
- Studymate Recycled Plastic Ruler 30cm Clear
Travel Around the World (Without Leaving Home)
Fill the box with everything kids need to create their own digital passport, including paper, coloured markers, stamps, stickers and more. If they have access to the internet, let them search Google Maps to find spots around the world to “travel” to. Then, after creating their passport, they can fill it with homemade stamps and fun facts about the places they’ve “been to”. Still bored? For more things to do, they could also try making their own map using a real one as a guide or make their own papier-mâché globe.
What to Try
- Studymate Coloured Markers 12 Pack
- Studymate A4 70gsm Tracing Paper Pad 50 Sheet
- J.Burrows Desk Mat Map of the World 435 x 620mm
- Learning Can Be Fun Sticker Set Animal World 800 Pack
This article was originally published in 2020 and has been updated.