27 Summer Activities For Kids

27 Summer Activities For Kids thumbnail

Summer is the season for adventure, creativity, and making memories. The best summer activities for kids are exciting, engaging, and provide educational or personal value. There are enriching activities available for every type of child so whether yours loves the outdoors, lives for creative projects, or thrives in social settings, this guide has you covered!

Child wearing sunglasses lying on beach towel, surrounded by summer items with Will and Riya.

Here's our 27 favorite summer activities for kids:

Outdoor and adventure activities

1. Explore your local zoo

A zoo trip is a summer classic for good reason. Kids love getting up close to animals and discovering how they live, eat, and behave. Make it interactive by challenging your child to sketch their favourite animal or write a fact file about a creature they'd never heard of before. No zoo nearby? Night Zookeeper lets children build their very own virtual Night Zoo, designing creative creatures and writing stories about them along the way.

2. Backyard camping

You don't need to travel far for an outdoor adventure! Pitch a tent in the garden, stargaze, tell stories, and make s'mores - it's an overnight experience without leaving home. Backyard camping encourages imagination, independence, and a love of the outdoors in a safe and familiar environment.

3. Nature journaling

Give your child a notebook and head outside to your local park or even your backyard. Encourage them to sketch the plants, insects, and birds they spot, jot down observations, and even press flowers or leaves between the pages. Nature journaling is brilliant for curious kids and doubles as a beautiful keepsake of the summer.

4. Grow something

Planting a sunflower, herb pot, or simple vegetable patch at the start of summer and watching it grow over the weeks is incredibly satisfying for children of all ages. It teaches patience, responsibility, and a connection to the natural world. And there's nothing quite like eating something you've grown yourself.

Child kneeling in grass planting a pot of flowers in soil with Will.

5. Pond dipping or rockpooling

For kids who love discovering miniature worlds, pond dipping, or a trip to the rockpools is endlessly fascinating. Arm them with a net, a bucket, and an identification guide and let their curiosity take over. It's low-cost, hands-on, and always produces plenty of excitement.

6. Build a den or fort

A timeless favourite that never gets old. Whether it's an outdoor den built from branches and rope or an epic indoor fort constructed from cushions and blankets, den-building sparks creativity, problem-solving, and hours of imaginative play.

7. Set up an outdoor art studio

Take the creative mess outside! Set up a painting station in the garden and let your child paint whatever catches their eye! Chalk art on the pavement, outdoor sculptures, and nature scavenger hunts all make great additions to a creative outdoor afternoon.

Creative and imaginative activities

8. Write and illustrate a book

Challenge your child to dream up their own story and bring it to life with illustrations. It can be a picture book, a comic, or something else. The finished product makes a brilliant keepsake and something they'll be proud of. They can even take it to school to show their friends!

9. Put on a play or puppet show

Kids write the script, design the costumes, build the set, and perform for the family - this one keeps children busy for days! It's a fantastic outlet for storytelling, performance, and teamwork, and the "premiere" is always a highlight of the summer.

10. Make a short film or stop-motion animation

Hugely popular with older kids and surprisingly easy to pull off with just a smartphone. Encourage your child to write a script, storyboard their ideas, and direct/star in their own production. Stop-motion animation in particular is super creative and very satisfying when the finished result comes together. Your child can also use basic video editing/movie making apps to merge clips together to create their movie.

11. Start a summer scrapbook

Ticket stubs, photographs, drawings, pressed flowers, postcards - a summer scrapbook captures the season in a way that photos alone never quite manage. Encourage your child to add captions and little notes alongside the mementos to build a record of the summer they'll love looking back on for years.

Sam the Giraffe looking at child cutting up colored paper.

12. Launch a blog

Got a budding storyteller? Encourage them to start a blog documenting their summer adventures, reviewing their favourite books and films, or publishing their own fictional stories. It builds confidence, creativity, and communication skills - all through something that genuinely feels like fun.

Night Zookeeper has blog features that lets kids publish their writing in a safe, moderated environment and connect with other young writers from around the world in a wonderfully creative community!

13. Get crafty

Arts and crafts are endlessly versatile and always a hit. Flower crowns, friendship bracelets, collages, paper windmills - the options are limitless! For an extra twist, challenge older kids to use only recycled or sustainable materials, turning the project into a conversation about the environment too.

14. Design a treasure hunt

Rather than simply solving a treasure hunt, challenge your child to create one for siblings or friends. They'll need to plan the clues, map out the route, and think like a puzzle-maker - it's far more creative and rewarding than it might sound!

Reading and writing activities

15. Start a book club

Turn reading into a social event by starting a book club. Kids get to pick the books, lead the discussions, and set fun challenges, like finishing a chapter before a day trip or reading in an unusual location. It's a wonderful way to spark a love of stories while spending quality time together.

Want to take it further? Night Zookeeper offers tons of reading games, sight word challenges, collaborative projects, and a rewarding reading tracker that make books even more exciting over summer!

16. Visit your local library

Libraries are hidden summer gems. Most run dedicated summer reading programmes packed with events, prizes, and activities designed to keep kids engaged. Let your child loose in the stacks and challenge them to pick out a book for you too - you might both discover a new favorite!

Penguin Professor with child smiling holding a book on their head in a library.

17. Write letters to a pen pal

In a world of instant messaging, receiving a handwritten letter feels genuinely special. Connect your child with a pen pal - it can be a cousin, a school friend, or a child in another country. You can encourage them to write regularly over the summer. It's a novelty kids genuinely love, and the anticipation of a receiving reply is half the fun!

18. Create a homemade newspaper

Challenge your child to become editor-in-chief of their very own publication. They can write news stories, interview family members, draw cartoons, and review films or books - then "publish" it for family and friends to read. It's a wonderfully creative project that can run all summer long with a new issue each week!

Digital activities

19. Make screen time count with Night Zookeeper

Night Zookeeper logo, displayed on tablet screen.

Not all screen time is created equal. Night Zookeeper gamifies reading and writing so that kids are genuinely having fun while building real skills. Children can design their own Night Zoo, create wonderful animals, collaborate on projects with kids from around the world, and take on writing challenges that feel far more like play than work! With personalized feedback their writing, kids grow in confidence and skills while having a brilliant time.

Start your FREE 7-day trial today!

20. Try coding or digital art

For older kids who love technology, coding apps and digital art platforms open up a whole new world of creativity. Whether they're building a simple game, designing a digital illustration, or experimenting with animation tools, these activities develop valuable skills while keeping them genuinely engaged.

Social and community activities

21. Host a family game night

A classic for good reason. Break out the board games, quiz cards, or a favourite video game and make a proper evening of it. Healthy competition, strategic thinking, and plenty of laughs - game nights are one of the simplest and most effective ways to bring the whole family together! And they're perfect for a rainy day.

22. Set up a lemonade stand or bake sale

A brilliant summer project for entrepreneurial kids. They plan the menu, handle the money, and run the whole operation, learning about budgeting, customer service, and the satisfaction of earning something through their own efforts! Donating the proceeds to a local charity adds an extra layer of purpose.

Sam the giraffe with a child selling lemonade at a homemade stand.

23. Volunteer or organise a neighbourhood clean-up

Summer is a great time for kids to feel part of something bigger. A local litter pick, a community garden project, or helping out at a food bank are all meaningful ways for children to develop empathy, responsibility, and a sense of community. Many local councils and charities actively welcome young volunteers.

24. Attend local community events

Keep an eye on your local noticeboard or council website for summer events such as outdoor cinema nights, fairs, sports days, art workshops, and theater performances. These give children the chance to connect with others, discover new interests, and feel part of their local community.

Rainy day activities

25. Host a kids' cooking or baking challenge

Pick a recipe and hand over the kitchen (with supervision, of course). Whether it's homemade pizza, decorated cupcakes, or a full three-course meal, letting kids take the lead in the kitchen builds confidence, independence, and some genuinely useful life skills. And everyone benefits from the results!

26. Visit a museum

Museums are far more hands-on than they used to be with many now offering scavenger hunts, science experiments, art workshops, and interactive displays designed with children in mind. Whether your local museum focuses on natural history, art, or science, an afternoon there can spark a curiosity that lasts well beyond the visit.

27. Start a jigsaw or puzzle challenge

Simple, satisfying, and surprisingly addictive. Set a puzzle out on a table and let it become a running family challenge throughout the week. You can track completion times and encourage kids to try and beat their own and their siblings records. For older kids, step up the difficulty and see how they get on.

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