25 Screen-Free Sunday Activities for Kids
Low-prep screen-free Sunday activities for toddlers, big kids, siblings, rainy afternoons, and quieter family time.
Low-prep screen-free Sunday activities for toddlers, big kids, siblings, rainy afternoons, and quieter family time.
Screen-free Sundays work better when the options are visible before the low-energy part of the day. A written list, small basket, or printed activity card can prevent the familiar spiral of asking, scrolling, and negotiating.
The goal is not to banish every screen forever. The first goal is to make the next good option easier to choose.
Try sticker scenes, watercolor postcards, puzzle books, copywork pages, simple clay, friendship bracelets, or building challenges with blocks already in the house.
For younger kids, keep the setup tiny. One tray, one instruction, one place to sit.
Try a living-room picnic, blanket fort reading, build-a-town blocks, scavenger hunts, make-a-card for someone at church, or a shared audiobook with drawing paper.
Sibling activities should have a clear finish line. "Build something together for 15 minutes" is usually easier than "play nicely."
Try a nature color hunt, sidewalk chalk town, porch reading hour, leaf rubbings, bug watching, backyard obstacle course, or a short family walk with one noticing prompt.
Low-energy version: send kids outside with chalk and one simple challenge, such as "draw a path from the door to the mailbox."
Keep faith connections gentle and concrete. Kids can draw a gratitude list, make a prayer card for a neighbor, set up a Bible basket, or act out a familiar story after a parent reads the passage.
Avoid turning every activity into a lesson. Sometimes the faithful thing is a quiet home and children who have something good to do.
What supplies do I need? Start with paper, crayons, stickers, blocks, books, and a small basket. Add more only after you learn what your kids actually reuse.
What ages is this for? Most ideas can be adapted for ages 2 to 12 with supervision and simpler instructions for younger children.
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A starter set of cozy, low-prep activity ideas for families who want Sunday afternoons to feel less screen-led.
No spam. Start with the pack, then use only what fits your family week.
No. Grace & Hearth provides practical home tools and prompts, not pastoral authority or denominational instruction.
No. Rhythms are meant to lower decision fatigue. Every system should bend around real family capacity.
Yes. Each article includes a Pinterest-friendly creative slot so the eventual pin asset can match the page intent.
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Printable devotion cards, screen-free activity cards, routine charts, scripture art, and weekly planning pages for a calmer Christian home.
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