Easter can sneak up on you, and suddenly you’re scrambling to plan something beyond a quick egg hunt and a sugar rush. Easter things to do for kids and parents don’t have to be complicated, expensive, or messy to feel special. With a little intention, you can turn this holiday into a relaxed mix of Easter family activities, cozy moments at home, and simple traditions that stick.
In this guide, you’ll find Easter activities for the whole family that work in small spaces, with low energy, and on a realistic budget. You’ll get ideas for Easter holiday things to do with kids, from classic Easter egg hunts to Easter STEM activities, Easter sensory bins, baking, and movie nights. Everything is designed to help you build a family Easter bucket list that feels fun, not overwhelming.
Whether you’re staying home, heading to the park, or mixing indoor and outdoor moments, these simple Easter activities at home and beyond will help you slow down, connect, and create memories your kids will remember long after the chocolate is gone.
Planning Your Family Easter Bucket List
Think of a family Easter bucket list as your anchor: a short, realistic set of Easter activities for the whole family that you commit to doing, no matter how busy life gets. Choose 5–10 ideas that fit your kids’ ages, your space, and your energy.
Mix quick wins (like reading Easter storybooks together) with “bigger” memories such as an Easter picnic in the park or a woodland walk. Include a balance of active play (Easter egg hunt, Easter obstacle course) and calm activities (Easter coloring pages, make homemade Easter cards) so you can flex with the weather and your mood.
A good rule: no guilt allowed. Your family Easter bucket list is there to guide you, not to add pressure. If you only do half of it, that’s still more connection than if you had no plan at all.
Simple Easter Activities at Home
If you’re staying in, there are plenty of Easter things to do for kids and parents that don’t require a big budget or a perfect house. Focus on simple Easter activities at home that use what you already have and keep setup and cleanup manageable.
Here are cozy at‑home ideas:
- Easter egg hunt (indoor & outdoor) using plastic eggs, paper clues, or even drawn paper eggs.
- Easter scavenger hunt with picture-based clues for little ones and written riddles for older kids.
- Easter egg decorating / egg dying with food coloring, stickers, crayons, or markers.
- Easter crafts for kids like paper bunnies, egg garlands, or DIY Easter bonnet making.
- Easter coloring pages printed at home or drawn by hand using simple egg and bunny outlines.
You can also plan a family movie night Easter edition with themed movies, popcorn, and pastel blankets, or a family game night with Easter bingo and simple Easter games. These lower‑energy Easter activities for the whole family are perfect when you’re tired but still want to be intentional.
Classic Easter Egg Fun (Hunts, Scavengers, Decorating)
Most kids see Easter egg fun as the main event, and you can stretch it far beyond a five‑minute dash around the garden. Blend classic Easter activities with creative twists so that both toddlers and older kids stay engaged.
Ideas to try:
- Indoor Easter egg hunt: Hide plastic eggs in drawers, behind cushions, or in shoes; use color‑coded eggs for different kids to prevent arguments.
- Outdoor Easter egg hunt: Use your yard or local park, hide eggs at different heights, and add simple challenges (hop like a bunny between clues, sing a silly song before opening an egg).
- Easter scavenger hunt: Create a list of items to “collect” (a pink egg, something that smells like spring, a bunny picture, a leaf shaped like a heart, etc.) and let kids check them off.
- Easter egg decorating / egg dying: Try traditional dye, crayons on warm eggs, stickers, washi tape, or even markers on paper egg cut‑outs for a low‑mess option.
- Dive‑for‑eggs pool game: If you have access to a pool, throw plastic eggs into the shallow end and let kids “dive” for them with goggles.
For a calmer twist, set up an Easter egg painting station with brushes, watercolors, and a plastic tablecloth. Parents can join in to make it an Easter activity for the whole family instead of just supervising from the sidelines.
Creative Crafts, STEM, and Sensory Play
Easter is a great excuse to weave creativity, science, and sensory play into your Easter family activities. These ideas work especially well for rainy days, low‑key weekends, or when you want to keep kids off screens.
Try these Easter crafts for kids:
- Easter bonnet making with cardboard, paper flowers, ribbons, and stickers.
- Make homemade Easter cards for grandparents, teachers, or neighbors.
- Simple paper crafts like Easter wreaths, bunny masks, or egg garlands.
Layer in Easter STEM activities and Easter science experiments:
- Dissolving candy eggs in different liquids (water, vinegar, soda) and observing what happens.
- Building an egg‑protecting “nest” with straws, tape, and paper, then dropping eggs (real or plastic) to test designs.
- Easter oobleck / slime using cornstarch, water, and a few drops of food coloring for oobleck, or a classic slime recipe with pastel colors.
For younger kids, set up Easter sensory bins with:
- Dry rice or pasta dyed in pastel colors, scoops, and plastic eggs.
- Easter playdough activities with cookie cutters, small plastic bunnies, and natural items like leaves or small stones.
These Easter sensory bins double as quiet play so parents can sit next to the kids with a hot drink and still be part of the moment.
Active Easter Games and Outdoor Adventures
If your kids are full of energy, plan a few Easter holiday things to do with kids that get them moving. Active play is especially helpful when you’ve had a big meal or too much chocolate.
Ideas for movement‑based fun:
- Easter obstacle course in the backyard or living room: Use cushions, chairs, hula hoops, and tape on the floor; add “bunny hops,” egg‑and‑spoon balancing, or carrot toss targets.
- Bunny hop races or egg relay races using spoons and plastic eggs.
- Dive‑for‑eggs pool game if you’re somewhere warm or have access to an indoor pool.
- Woodland walk / nature walk: Spot signs of spring, look for bird nests, buds, blossoms, and interesting leaves; you can turn it into an Easter scavenger hunt with a nature‑themed checklist.
Don’t forget slower outdoor moments. An Easter picnic in the park with simple snacks, a blanket, and a few small toys can be just as memorable as a big event. Add kite‑flying, bubbles, or a quick round of Easter bingo on the grass for a complete Easter activities for the whole family afternoon.
Traditions, Faith, and Cozy Family Time
Beyond the fun and games, Easter things to do for kids and parents can also include gentle traditions and reflection. These moments help kids feel rooted and remind everyone that the holiday is about more than candy.
Consider adding:
- Read Easter storybooks together: Pick age‑appropriate books about the Easter story, spring, kindness, and hope, then read aloud at bedtime or during quiet afternoons.
- Make a resurrection garden: Use a shallow dish, soil, moss, small stones, and a tiny “tomb” made from a small pot; plant grass or small plants and talk about new life as they grow.
- Plant something green for Easter in the garden or in pots on a balcony or windowsill; let kids water and observe the growth over the next weeks.
- Family Easter photo tradition: Take an annual picture in the same spot (on the couch, at the front door, in the yard) so you can see your family grow over time.
- Family movie night Easter edition and family game night with Easter bingo or Easter games to wrap up the day.
If faith is part of your celebration, you can attend a service, read scriptures, or share what you’re grateful for before Easter lunch. Keep it short, natural, and age‑appropriate so it feels like a meaningful ritual, not a lecture.
Quick‑Start Easter Checklist (Print‑Friendly)
Use this practical checklist as your ready‑to‑go family Easter bucket list. Pick a few ideas from each category and check them off as you go.
- Plan a simple indoor Easter egg hunt.
- Plan an outdoor Easter egg hunt (weather‑permitting).
- Create an Easter scavenger hunt with clues.
- Decorate eggs (dye, paint, or sticker plastic/paper eggs).
- Make an Easter bonnet together.
- Print or draw Easter coloring pages.
- Make homemade Easter cards.
- Bake Easter cookies or cupcakes with kids.
- Schedule an Easter picnic in the park.
- Go on a woodland walk / nature walk and spot signs of spring.
- Set up one Easter STEM activity or Easter science experiment.
- Prepare an Easter sensory bin and Easter playdough activities.
- Try Easter oobleck or slime.
- Build a simple Easter obstacle course.
- Play a dive‑for‑eggs pool game (if you have safe access to a pool).
- Take a family Easter photo (same spot every year).
- Plant something green for Easter in a garden or pot.
- Make a resurrection garden with kids.
- Read at least one Easter storybook together.
- Host a family movie night Easter edition or Easter game night with Easter bingo.
Pick your top 5–7 ideas from this list, write them on a sticky note, and pop it on the fridge. Let everyone add one must‑do Easter activity for the whole family so kids feel involved.
Easter doesn’t have to be picture‑perfect or packed with events to be meaningful. When you choose a few simple Easter things to do for kids and parents, you create space for connection, laughter, and calm in the middle of a busy season. Start with one small activity this year, notice what your family loves most, and let your family Easter bucket list grow slowly over time.
FAQs About Easter Things To Do For Kids And Parents
How can we celebrate Easter when we have very little time?
If your schedule is packed, focus on one small Easter family activity each day instead of trying to do everything on Easter Sunday. You might read a short Easter storybook at bedtime or decorate a few eggs after dinner. On the weekend, pick just one “bigger” event like an Easter egg hunt (indoor & outdoor) or an Easter picnic in the park. A short family movie night Easter edition can also be a low‑effort way to feel festive. The goal is consistent, bite‑sized connection, not a packed calendar.
What are low‑energy Easter activities for tired parents?
On days when you’re exhausted, lean on calm, low‑prep activities. Easter coloring pages, make homemade Easter cards, or Easter crafts for kids using basic supplies are great options. You can also set up Easter sensory bins or Easter playdough activities and supervise from the couch while kids explore. A family game night with Easter bingo, simple board games, or an easy Easter scavenger hunt around the living room keeps everyone engaged without much setup. Pair these with a relaxed snack plate, and call it a win.
How do we stay consistent with Easter traditions without feeling overwhelmed?
Start with a tiny, repeatable routine instead of a huge list of must‑do Easter holiday things to do with kids. For example, pick one tradition for morning (a family Easter photo tradition), one for midday (egg hunt or Easter lunch), and one for evening (reading Easter storybooks together or family movie night). Keep a simple family Easter bucket list on the fridge and commit to just a handful of activities, like planting something green for Easter or making a resurrection garden. As your family grows and seasons change, you can add or swap traditions without pressure.
What can we do if we live in a small space or apartment?
In small spaces, focus on Easter activities for the whole family that don’t require a yard. An indoor Easter egg hunt, Easter scavenger hunt in your living room, or small‑scale Easter obstacle course using cushions and tape works well. Easter baking with kids (cookies or cupcakes), Easter STEM activities on a tabletop, or Easter science experiments using basic kitchen ingredients fit easily into apartment life. For outdoor moments, use shared outdoor areas or a local park for an Easter picnic in the park or woodland walk / nature walk.
How can we manage the mental load of planning Easter things to do?
Reduce mental load by planning Easter things to do for kids and parents in one short session. Brain‑dump ideas, highlight 5–7 realistic activities (like Easter egg decorating, Easter sensory bins, and family movie night), and turn them into a visual family Easter bucket list. Prepare a simple “Easter box” with reusable supplies (plastic eggs, craft basics, Easter coloring pages, bingo cards) so you’re not hunting for materials. Finally, share the load by letting kids choose activities and involving your partner or relatives in setup, leading games, or reading Easter storybooks together.
Even one tiny step—like printing a single checklist or planning one Easter egg hunt—counts as a real win. Start with the easiest idea that feels doable this week, and let the rest grow naturally around it. If this guide feels helpful, save it so you can come back when your brain is tired, and follow @theclutteredblog on Pinterest for more simple, realistic ideas for your everyday routines.

