Indoor Fun

15 Awesome Summer Activities for Preschoolers

Sensory bins, painting, outdoor crafts and more

brother and sister working on summer time crafts

Get creative with these fun summer activities. Photo: iStock

Updated on: June 11, 2026

Estimated reading time:

5 minutes

Preschoolers love constant play and learning so they need lots of stimulating activities to keep them busy. These entertaining pursuits should be fun, but you also want them to engage your child in the kind of sensory play that helps develop their fine motor skills.

Thankfully, there’s a wealth of ideas out there from parents who have planned inexpensive, educational, fun activities the rest of us can introduce to our own kids.

Start planning your summer fun now with these projects.

paper plate decorated like a watermelon
iStock

Nothing says summer like watermelon! This version is made of paper, but your kids will still love it. Using paper plates and construction paper, make your watermelon slices, then write a number on each slice. Hand over a hole punch to your child, and let them punch a different number of holes in each slice. Bonus: You’ll have some fun red confetti after this project for your next celebration! Head to Kindergarten Connection for details.  

Pink and blue felt balls in an ice cream cone
Scoop up a pretend ice cream cone this summer. Photo: iStock

Nothing says summer quite like an ice cream cone. These felt pompoms will spark the imagination, and let kids work on counting (match the number of pompoms to the number written on a cone) and fine motor skills as they use the “handy scoopers.” Mix and match colors and pass the cones out to everyone. Turner Tots has all the details you need to recreate this fun activity at home. 

Girl working on a craft project
iStock

Sometimes, even in the summer, you need a simple quiet activity. Kids will love hanging out with the button octopus, adding more and more arms, mixing and matching the colors. You’ll need to help with the initial creation of the octopus and arms, but once it’s made, keep it close by when you need a quick, engaging activity. Michelle at Taming Little Monsters has all the details you’ll need.

child painting on a shower curtain
iStock

Your little Picassos are going to love this fun outside activity. This clever idea gives kids a huge canvas to paint again and again, and keeps the mess outside — off your dining room table. Check out all the details about how to set up this fun activity on the blog Happy Toddler Playtime.

child making a necklace out of snack foods
iStock

This activity checks off two toddler needs at once: an activity and a snack. Let kids put their favorite snacks on a string and, voila, snack necklace! Check out all the details on the Happy Toddler Playtime blog. 

child making a butterfly or firefly craft out of a paper tube
iStock

For slightly older kids, this is a craft that will use up those toilet paper rolls. Pick up a copy of “The Very Lonely Firefly” by Eric Carle, and Buggy and Buddy will explain how to make this simple craft that ties right into the book.

Little girl playing with shaving cream
iStock

Summer is the best time for those extra-messy activities your toddler loves but require a hose to clean up. Enter this shaving-cream-and-sand combo. Set your kid up on the driveway or in the backyard with a bin of play sand, then add shaving cream and mix. The blog Little Bins for Little Hands makes the process crystal clear. 

child playing with water outside
iStock

If the weather cooperates, your little one will love being outside, playing with water all summer long. Adding a few toys and tongs helps them with their fine-motor skill development as they work to grab small objects and move them between buckets. Check out the tutorial from The Empowered Educator to see how it’s done.

beach sensory bin for a child to play with
iStock

If you don’t have a beach trip planned, you can create a mini version in your backyard with just a few supplies.

Creating mini play settings, such as a miniature ocean, can help ignite your child’s imagination and provide a jumping-off point for talking about creatures that live in the sea, the differences between water and land animals, and even how we can help protect the ocean by keeping it clean. Sand, water and some sea creatures are all you need for this simple activity from Playing House

red bin with ice and a metal scoop
iStock

On the hottest of days, break out the plastic bins and empty out the ice maker. Kids will love scooping the ice cubes from one plastic bin to the other, especially when they can watch the ice cubes melt in water tinted with food coloring. On the next sweltering summer day, this activity from the fabulous site Busy Toddler will be a welcome relief. 

colors running down a piece of paper
iStock

Because the weather’s a little warmer, rainy days in the summer don’t necessarily have to be spent indoors. This gem of an idea from Housing a Forest shows you lots of different ways you can use the rain to your advantage. Kids can create wonderful artwork with supplies you probably have around your house.

seashell activity tray
iStock

Exploration trays are a great way to keep toddlers focused on a single activity. This summer-themed tray featuring seashells and a little plastic magnifying glass is as simple as it gets, but it will keep your child occupied and learning about the intricacies of texture. See how to put it together in minutes at the blog Our Country Road.

child playing with fingerpaint
iStock

I love the idea of letting my kids paint outside, but I’m still trying to wash the finger paint out of the concrete patio from our last attempt at plein air painting. This recipe for homemade paint from Repeat Crafter Me is designed for messy and artistic use outdoors. It uses ingredients you have around the house, such as flour and dish soap, and won’t make a permanent splotch on your patio.

helicopter seeds from a tree
iStock

Every time I recycle a toilet paper tube, I think it’s a missed opportunity for a craft. Here’s one good idea: Collect a few of those little helicopter seeds from a nearby maple tree and turn them into a dragonfly craft by following this easy tutorial from Juise. Your kid can pretend to fly it around the yard all day.

water beads
iStock

Have you tried water beads with your preschooler yet? They’re perfect for kids who love tactile exploration. They’re actually floral beads meant to fill up vases, but they’re perfect added to a water bin, so long as your child is old enough to know not to eat them or inset them into their nose or ears (water beads send thousands of children to the emergency room every year). The Imagination Tree explains the simple process of making a sensory bin with water beads. (Just keep them out of your drains!) 

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission set a new safety rule for water beads in March 2026. Water beads can cause life-threatening situations if swallowed and the new rule limits water beads that are marketed as toys from expanding beyond 5 millimeters (about the size of a pea). You can read more about the safety changes here

More summer fun for families: 

Editor’s note: This article was originally published several years ago and most recently updated by ParentMap’s associate editor, Kari Hanson, on July 2, 2025.