Key Takeaways
- Winter break doesn’t have to mean endless screen time for bored kids.
- Simple activities using household items can keep children engaged for hours.
- Outdoor winter activities provide exercise and fresh air even in cold weather.
- Creative projects and science experiments spark curiosity and learning.
- Establishing screen-free routines now builds healthier habits year-round.

The kids are home from school. It’s cold outside. And you’ve already heard “I’m bored” seventeen times before lunch.
Winter break is wonderful in theory. In practice? It often means your kids glued to tablets, phones, and TVs while you wonder if their brains are turning to mush.
Here’s the good news: keeping kids entertained without screens doesn’t require a Pinterest-perfect playroom or an unlimited budget. You just need a few solid ideas and the willingness to let things get a little messy.
Why Screen-Free Time Actually Matters
Before we dive into the activities, let’s talk about why this matters. We’re not anti-technology. Screens have their place. But when kids spend their entire winter break scrolling and gaming, they miss out on developing crucial skills like creativity, problem-solving, and just being okay with boredom.
Plus, if you’ve been working on establishing healthy cell phone habits for yourself, winter break is the perfect time to set better boundaries for the whole family.
Indoor Activities That Don’t Require Screens
Sensory and Messy Play
1. DIY Beeswax Modeling Clay
Remember playdough? This is better. Making your own beeswax clay gives kids something to do with their hands, and the texture is way more satisfying than store-bought stuff. Plus it smells amazing.
2. Edible Water Bead Sensory Play
If you’ve got younger kids who still put everything in their mouths, edible water beads are a game changer. They’re safe, squishy, and weirdly entertaining for way longer than you’d expect.
3. Arctic Sensory Bin
Winter-themed sensory bins are perfect for this time of year. Check out our arctic sensory bin guide for a setup that’ll keep little ones busy while you drink your coffee in peace.
4. Fizzy Snow Dough Painting
This one combines art and science. Snow dough painting creates colorful fizzy reactions that fascinate kids. Fair warning: it’s messy. But that’s kind of the point.
Creative and Art Projects
5. Salt Dough Mosaic Tiles
Salt dough projects are cheap, easy, and you probably have everything you need already. Kids can make ornaments, decorations, or just weird abstract art. All of it works.
6. Contact Paper Confetti Kite
This contact paper kite craft is basically a fancy suncatcher that kids can actually make themselves. Stick it on a window and it looks like you’re a crafty parent who has their life together.
7. Scented Watercolor Spray Paints
Regular painting is fine. Scented spray painting is way more exciting. Put some paper outside (or in the bathtub if it’s too cold) and let them go wild.
8. DIY Powdered Paint
Making your own paint sounds complicated, but homemade powdered paint is surprisingly easy. Plus kids love the process of creating the supplies before they even start the project.
Science Experiments
9. Glowing Bouncy Egg Experiment
This bouncy egg experiment is pure magic to kids. You dissolve an eggshell in vinegar, and suddenly you have a bouncy, glowing egg. Science is cool.
10. Kandinsky Citric Fizz
Combine art and chemistry with this fizzing paint experiment. It’s inspired by famous abstract art, but really it’s just an excuse to make colorful fizzy reactions.
11. DIY Felt Finger Puppets
Making finger puppets gives kids a craft project and a toy in one. Once they’re done creating the puppets, they can put on shows for the family. You’ll be required to watch. Sorry.
Outdoor Winter Activities (Yes, Even When It’s Cold)
12. Build an Epic Snow Fort
If you’ve got snow, use it. Snow forts, snowmen, and snow angels cost nothing and tire kids out better than any indoor activity.
13. Winter Scavenger Hunt
Create a list of winter things to find: icicles, animal tracks, pinecones, evergreen branches. Give kids a bag and send them hunting. Bonus points if it gets them outside for more than five minutes.
14. Ice Experiments
Freeze toys in containers of water, add food coloring, and let kids figure out how to melt them free. It’s science, it’s outside, and it keeps them busy.
15. Backyard Obstacle Course
Set up a simple obstacle course with things you already have. Jump over this stick, crawl under that bench, run around those trees. Time them and let them try to beat their own record.
Activities That Require Minimal Setup
16. Build a Blanket Fort
The classic never dies. Give kids every blanket and pillow in the house and let them build. The fort will stay up for days and become their main hangout spot.
17. Indoor Camping
Speaking of forts, turn one into a campsite. Make s’mores in the microwave, tell stories with flashlights, and let them sleep in sleeping bags on the living room floor.
18. Board Game Marathon
Dust off the board games and actually play them. Start a family tournament. Keep score. Make it competitive. Kids love competition.
19. Cooking and Baking Together
Let kids help make lunch or bake cookies. Yes, it takes longer. Yes, the kitchen gets messier. But they’re learning actual life skills and you get to eat the results.
20. Card Games
Teach your kids poker. Or Go Fish. Or Uno. Card games are cheap entertainment that actually brings the family together without anyone staring at a screen.
Activities for Older Kids and Teens
21. DIY Room Makeover
Let teens rearrange their room, make new decorations, or create a vision board. Give them some autonomy over their space. They’ll be occupied for hours.
22. Learn a New Skill
Winter break is perfect for learning something new. Juggling, origami, basic coding (okay fine, that one uses a screen), or cooking a new recipe. Pick something and commit to learning it together.
23. Start a Journal or Sketchbook
Give kids a blank notebook and let them do whatever they want with it. Draw, write, make lists, plan things. No rules. Just create.
24. Family Photo Project
Go through old photos together. Print some out. Make a collage or scrapbook. Tell stories about the pictures. It’s a surprisingly good way to connect.
25. Host a Family Talent Show
Everyone has to perform something. Sing, dance, tell jokes, do magic tricks. It’ll be ridiculous and embarrassing and you’ll all remember it.
Making It Work in Real Life
Look, not every activity will be a hit. Some kids will complain. Some projects will fail spectacularly. That’s fine.
The goal isn’t to fill every single minute of winter break with structured activities. Kids need downtime too. They need to be bored sometimes. Boredom is actually healthy because it forces creativity.
But having a list of screen-free options ready means you’re not scrambling when the whining starts. Pick a few favorites from this list, keep the supplies handy, and pull them out when you need them.
Set Expectations Early
Before winter break starts, have a conversation with your kids about screen time limits. Make it clear that winter break doesn’t mean unlimited iPad time. Create a simple schedule that includes both screen time and other activities.
This ties directly into modern parenting challenges around technology. Setting boundaries now makes everything easier later.
The Amazon Reality Check
Quick note: Most of these activities use stuff you probably already have at home. But if you need to buy supplies, don’t overthink it. Craft supplies, modeling clay, paint, simple science kits—these are all easy to find and relatively cheap.
The fancier kits marketed as “educational winter break activities” are usually overpriced. Stick with basics and your kids will have just as much fun.
Connect as a Family
Winter break is short. Your kids are growing up faster than you realize. Put your own phone down, turn off the TV, and actually spend time together.
Try some of these conversation starters while you’re doing activities together. Real conversations happen when hands are busy and pressure is off.
The Bottom Line
Screen-free winter break activities don’t have to be complicated or expensive. They just have to exist as an option when your kids inevitably get bored.
Pick three or four activities from this list that match your kids’ ages and interests. Get the supplies ready. And when you hear “I’m bored,” you’ll have actual answers.
Will there still be some screen time? Probably. And that’s okay. The goal is balance, not perfection.
Now go make some memories before they’re back in school and you’re wondering where winter break went.
