Road trips with children donโt have to be difficult ordeals punctuated by endless variations of โAre we there yet?โ Try out these 21 fun car games to keep your young crew entertained. An added bonus? Car activities will keep them engaged and give them the cognitive,ย social, and emotional benefits of play. A real win-win.
1. The License Plate Game
Make a group effort to spot tags from all 50 states. Whoever calls out a stateโs license plate first gets a point. (Bonus points for the first person to spy a Canadian plate!) The family member with the most points at the end of the drive wins.
2. Trivia Questions
Before the car ride,ย prepare a list of trivia questionsย about your kidsโ specific interests, whether itโs Disney characters or American history. Ask them throughout the drive to get their brains pumping.
3. Story Time
Get creative inventing a family fairy tale! The first person starts with โOnce upon a timeโฆโ and offers a complete sentence, then the second person adds to the story with their sentence. Take turns adding sentences until the story reaches a conclusion.
You can either set a time limit (say, 15 minutes) or wrap it up after each person has a chance to say three sentences. Consider recording the story on your phone and having someone transcribe it afterward, so youโll never forget it.
4. Questions
There arenโt many distractions in the car, so itโs the perfect opportunity to bond with your children. Get them talking by asking someย fun โget-to-know-youโ questions: What is the most adventurous thing youโve ever eaten? What do you like daydreaming about? What are three things you want to do this summer?
5. The Alphabet Game
One person chooses the right-hand side of the road, and the other gets left. Then, each looks for letters of the alphabetย that appear on signs or license plates on their side.
The object of the game is to point out all the letters of the alphabet in order, from A to Z. The first person to spot the entire alphabet wins!
6. The Animal Name Game
To start this road trip game, one person names an animal. The next person then has to name another animal (no repeating!) that begins with the last letter of the previous animal named (for example, โelephantโ ends with โt,โ so the next person might say โtiger,โ after which the next person might say โraccoon,โ and so on).
The game can go on forever, and kids like that no one wins or loses. If your children are a little older, you can swap animals for other categories like TV shows, cities, or foods.
7. Twenty Questions
One person secretly thinks of a person, place, or thing. The other players then take turns asking yes-or-no questions, such as โCan it fly?โ or โDoes it grow in the ground?โ Finally, after the players have asked 20 questions, each player gets a chance to make a guess.
8. Telephone
Designate a storyteller. The storyteller whispers a story to someone else in the car. That person whispers the same storyโgetting as close as they can to recreating it word-for-wordโto a third person, and so on. The last person to hear the story repeats it out loud so everyone can hear. Invariably, some of the stories will have been lost in the translation, and the resulting garbled message usually inspires a good laugh.
9. The Theme Song Game
One person hums the tune to aย favorite TV show, and everyone else tries to name the show as fast as possible. Then, the first person to guess correctly hums the next song and starts the game again.
10. Name That Song
Take turns singing a single song lyric. Then, the other people in the car can guess the singer or titleโbonus points if they get both! (This game works best for older children and teens.)
11. Scavenger Hunt
Youโll need some advanced planning for this one. Before the trip, make a list of items youโre likely to see on the roadโa blue billboard, cows, a motorcycle, etc. Your kids can be on the lookout for these items, keeping track of what they see. If they find everything on your list, they win a prize. (Perhaps some candy at the next rest stop?)
12. Memory Test
The first person says, โA is for __,โ filling in the blank with any word beginning with the letter โA,โ such as โapple.โ The second person comes up with a word for the letter B, such as โbook,โ but must also repeat the โAโ word: โA is for apple, B is for book.โ
Continue through the alphabet, each person taking several turns and reciting more letters and words. By the time you reach the letter โZ,โ that player will have to recite the whole alphabet and each letterโs corresponding word. If youโre playing with younger kids, you can choose an earlier letter to end on than โZ.โ
13. Secret Place Race
One person looks at a road map and finds a small town, village, lake, or river. That person announces the name of the place they have chosen. A second player has 60 seconds to look at the map and try to find the secret place.
14. Restaurant Race
Each player chooses a fast-food restaurant, such as Burger King, Taco Bell, or McDonaldโs. Players earn points by spotting their restaurant off the road, on a billboard, on exit markers, on Food and Fuel signs, or by hearing it mentioned on the radio. Impose a time limitโsay, 20 minutesโthen add up the points.
15. Healthy Competition
Though not exactly a โcarโ game, this activity is perfect for long road trips. To offset the sedentary nature of the journey, have kids compete in athletic challenges at rest stops. See who can do the most sprints, push-ups, or jumping jacks in a minute, then stage a 20-yard dash.
16. Would You Rather?
Start a round of โWould You Rather?โ with everyone getting a turn to ask far-fetched questions of the family. For example, โWould you rather eat chocolate or pizza for an entire day?โ or โWould you rather have the ability to fly or become invisible?โ Your familyโs answers may surprise you!
17. Categories
Choose a broad category, such as cities, movie titles, or dinner foods. Then, players take turns naming items within the chosen category in alphabetical order. For example, if you chose cities, you could say Athens, Boise, Charleston, Detroit, and Edinburgh. If a player doesnโt state their answer within 10 secondsโor doesnโt travel down the alphabet correctlyโtheyโre out. The last player standing wins.
18. Word Association
The first player states a random word aloud. The next player quickly says another word associated with the first one. These steps repeat, cycling through all of the players. (Hereโs an example: mustard, hot dog, barbecue, Fourth of July, fireworksโฆ). The game ends if someone takes too long to answer, provides an answer without a clear association, or repeats a word.
19. Watch Your Mouth!
Before the road trip, choose words or phrases that are โoff-limitsโ in the carโfor example, the first names of family members or โAre we there yet?โ If someone says one of the off-limits words, they get a point. Whoever has the fewest points at the end of the drive wins the game!
20. Counting Cows
This game is surprisingly simple. Whenever you pass a cow, yell out โcow!โ or โmoo!โ The first person to spot the cow and say the word gets a point (no repeats!). Whoever racks up the most points is declared the winner.
21. Road Trip Riffing
The first player starts by singing a few lines of a song. Then, another person jumps in to connect the lyrics with another song (essentially, the last lyrics Player One sings should be the first lyrics Player Two sings). Hereโs an example: โTwinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what youโฆ.โ โYou are my sunshine, my only sunshine, you make me happyโฆโ โHappy birthday to you!โ