Bathtime can be the perfect opportunity for a lot of good clean fun, for both you and your kids. Mixing up your routine with a few next-level bathtime activities can inspire even the most tub-resistant kids to look forward to their next bath. Try these ideas for what to do with your kids in the bath, and get ready to turn tub time into an exciting part of the day.
Combine water with food coloring or chemical-free food dye, then freeze the various mixtures in an ice cube tray. Bonus points for trays that make cubes in fun shapes (bring on the stars, hearts and dinos!). You can also add small toys–plastic animals, bouncy balls—to tray compartments so they are frozen inside the cubes. When it’s bathtime, fill the tub, add ice cubes and let your child play with them as they melt—and don’t worry, food coloring agents won’t stain your tub. It’s fun to watch kids discover what happens when colors meld together. Red and blue makes…purple?!
Make your own tile-safe bathtub paints, and let your kids get their art on without making a mess. Here’s how:
What’s more fun than dropping something fizzy, colorful and beautifully scented into a bath? Some of the commercial bath bombs can contain ingredients that are a little too harsh for a toddler’s skin, but you can easily make your own at home. Follow these steps:
If your kid is really resistant to bathing, bill bathtime as an opportunity to give her favorite toys a scrub. Keep your baby bathtub handy, and fill it up with sudsy water. After she has a great time splashing around and giving her toys a wash (cross “cleaning toys” off your checklist!), your tot might be more amenable to taking her own bath. But at the very least, all that toy washing should have washed away some of her own grime too. Stash the freshly cleaned toys in a Bath Toy Bin, where they can air-dry and stay within easy reach for the next time your baby is ready to play.
Give the same old bath toys a break, and introduce something a little different than what's in your bath toy bin. Raid your kitchen drawers and introduce plastic measuring cups, silicone baking cups and strainers, or even a whisk, and let your kid try his hand at “cooking” with soap and water in the tub. (When bathtime is done, just load those items into the dishwasher, and you’ll be ready for your next real-life cooking adventure with your kids.)
Soothe baby’s irritated skin with a homemade oatmeal bath. Or treat yourself and your toddler by mixing up a kid-safe face mask and painting it on you and your kiddo. (Find an easy, DIY recipe here.) Yes, your little one might taste-test the honey and lemon, but you’ll both have glowing skin afterwards.
Music makes everything better. (See: washing dishes, folding laundry, road trips.) So make a special tub-friendly playlist—”Splish Splash,” “Rubber Duckie, You’re the One,” “Baby Shark”—and twist the bathtime away.
Bubble bath is a given, so when the tub has plenty of suds, start piling them up into mountains, castles, cupcakes…. A rubber spatula or two might come in handy for sculpting; food coloring or that cool homemade paint will be fun for stress-free color (it’ll drain out with the bath water, leaving nary a stain on your tub).
Lather your little one’s hair up with plenty of tear-free shampoo, then style their hair into gravity-defying dos. Think Elvis, Poppy from Trolls or Superman (that forehead curl). Bring along a non-breakable mirror (another fun bathtime accessory in general!) for admiring your handiwork.
Things like sponges, squeeze bottles and straws all make great bath companions. Use sponges and bathtub paint to decorate sides of the tub. Make secret potions in squeeze bottles with colored water and a few drops of soap, or squirt water to knock toys off the tub spout. Build sculptures out of straws and pour water through. The creative possibilities are endless.
When it’s bathtime, grab a stool and a favorite, non-breakable tea set and watch your child turn into the perfect party host. Two spoonfuls of foam, please.
The bath is a wonderful place to play scientist. Round up some common household objects—a wooden spoon, a silicone spatula, an apple, a tennis ball, etc.—and test out what floats and what sinks.
Bubbles make everything better and bathtime is no exception. Plus, in the bath, you don’t have to worry about wiping up slippery, sticky soap spots when bubbles pop.
Hit the switch, add glow sticks and glow-in-the-dark toys and transform your bathroom into the coolest, kid-centric night club on the block. (You get to be your kid’s plus one.)
Foam letters—especially ones that stick to the tub and tiles—spell F-U-N in any bath. Practice easy words, ask kids to find the letters in their name, or line letters up in an alphabetized row the length of the tub.
Now that you know how to bring the joy to your child’s bath routine, here’s how to keep tubtime happy even when the weather cools.
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