October is the perfect time to get creative with your kids. Whether you’re looking for a quick activity to fill a rainy afternoon or planning a full month of spooky season fun, halloween crafts offer endless opportunities for creativity, learning, and family bonding.
This guide covers everything from 15-minute projects for busy weeknights to more involved makes that older kids and teens will love. You’ll find crafts organized by age group, setting, and theme—plus practical tips on materials, safety, and how to keep the whole family engaged throughout October.
- Quick-start: easy Halloween crafts to try first
- Why Halloween crafts are great for kids
- Halloween crafts for toddlers and preschoolers (ages 2–5)
- Spooky-but-cute crafts for kids ages 5–9
- Halloween crafts for older kids and tweens (ages 9–12)
- Teens’ Halloween craft ideas and DIY decor
- Eco-friendly and recycled Halloween crafts
- Glow-in-the-dark and light-up Halloween projects
- Pumpkin crafts and no-carve alternatives
- Spider, bat, and skeleton crafts
- Haunted houses, witches, and monster makes
- STEM and sensory Halloween activities
- Halloween crafts by setting: home, classroom, and parties
- Safety tips and age-appropriate materials
- Planning a month of Halloween crafting
Quick-start: easy Halloween crafts to try first
These are the fastest, lowest-mess ideas you can set up in under 15 minutes. Perfect for when you need halloween fun without a lot of prep time or cleanup.
Paper Plate Ghosts

Grab a white paper plate (28–30 cm works best), cut wavy strips along the bottom edge for a flowing ghost body, and let kids add googly eyes and a marker mouth. Age range: 2–7. This is an instant start project because most households already have plates on hand.
Coffee Filter Ghost Lollipops
Wrap a white coffee filter around a lollipop, secure with a small rubber band, and draw on a spooky face with marker. Age range: 3–10. These double as halloween treats for classmates or trick or treating companions.
Handprint Pumpkins
Press small hands into orange washable paint on cardstock, then add a green thumbprint stem and black marker details for faces. Age range: 2–6. This creates keepsake handprint art you’ll treasure for years.
Toilet Paper Roll Monsters
Paint a toilet paper roll any color, add construction paper horns, felt tongues, and pom poms for noses. Age range: 4–9. Perfect way to use items from your recycling bin.
Pipe Cleaner Spiders
Twist four black pipe cleaners together at the center, bend into eight legs, and glue on a pompom body with googly eyes. Age range: 5–10. Clip them onto plants or curtains for instant spooky halloween decoration, or try space-themed crafts for kids for even more creative fun.
Setup tips for success:
- Pre-cut circles and shapes before kids arrive at the table
- Use washable paint and keep a damp cloth nearby for quick hand wipes
- Lay newspaper or a plastic tablecloth to make cleanup easier
- Set out glue sticks rather than liquid glue for less mess
These crafts also work brilliantly as last-minute activities on 31 October before trick or treating, or for a quick after-school session when you need to keep hands busy.

Why Halloween crafts are great for kids
Halloween 2024 falls on a Thursday, which means crafts can help fill the afternoons and weekends leading up to 31 October. Beyond keeping young kids entertained, these activities offer real developmental benefits.
Fine motor skills and pre-writing practice
- Tearing tissue paper strengthens finger muscles needed for pencil grip
- Threading yarn through holes develops hand eye coordination
- Cutting along lines on a printable template builds scissor control
- Gluing small details like googly eyes and pony beads encourages precision
Imagination and storytelling
- Kids invent backstories for their witches, zombies, and silly monsters
- Crafted halloween characters become props for pretend play
- Creating a spooktacular haunted house sparks narrative thinking
- Children practice describing their creations to family members
Emotional benefits
- Turning “scary” ideas like ghosts and spiders into cute craft versions can gently reduce fear
- Working through the steps of a project builds confidence and patience
- Completing a craft gives children a tangible sense of accomplishment
Family memories and traditions
- Keep a handprint ghost from each year to see how small hands used to be
- Reuse the same yarn pumpkin garland every October long
- Create an annual craft night that the whole family looks forward to
- Build a collection of dated keepsakes to look back on
Age-appropriate expectations:
| Age Group | What to Expect |
|---|---|
| Toddlers (2–3) | Focus on textures, stamping, and big shapes; expect mess |
| Preschoolers (3–5) | Can follow 2–3 step instructions; enjoy gluing and sticking |
| Early elementary (5–8) | Follow multi-step projects; can cut and assemble |
| Tweens (9–12) | Take over complex builds; appreciate “grown-up” results |
| Teens (13+) | Lead projects independently; prefer aesthetic, shareable makes |
Halloween crafts for toddlers and preschoolers (ages 2–5)
Projects for this age group use large pieces, non-toxic supplies, and mostly glue, paint, or tape instead of detailed cutting. The goal is sensory exploration and fun rather than perfect results.
Hand and Footprint Ghosts & Bats
Create white footprint ghosts by pressing little feet into white paint on black cardstock—the heel becomes the ghost’s head. For black cat or bat wings, use black paint handprints with thumbs spread wide. Activities like these are not just fun—they also support art and craft benefits for child development and growth. Write “Halloween 2024” on the back for a keepsake card.
Materials: A4 black or orange cardstock, white and black washable paint, wet wipes
Puffy Cotton Wool Ghosts
Draw a simple ghost outline on card. Let toddlers dab glue inside the lines and stick cotton balls all over. Add a 2024 date at the bottom. The sensory feel of pulling apart cotton is especially engaging for younger children.
Safety note: Supervise closely as cotton balls can be a choking hazard for under-3s.
Tissue Paper Pumpkin Collages
Pre-cut orange, green, and black tissue paper into 3–4 cm squares. Kids dab glue sticks on a paper plate and press tissue pieces to form a pumpkin face. This works on shape recognition and creates colorful halloween decor for the fridge.
Materials: 23–25 cm paper plates, tissue paper squares, glue sticks, black marker for face details
Paper Plate Pumpkin Masks
Paint a paper plate orange and let dry. Cut eye holes (adult task). Use chunky crayons or acrylic paint to add a jack o lantern face. Staple elastic or ribbon to the sides so children can wear their creation for a mini costume parade.
Sticker Spiderwebs
Draw a circular web pattern with black marker on white card. Give toddlers Halloween sticker sheets featuring spiders, stars, and mini pumpkins to fill in the web. This easy project requires zero paint and develops practice fine motor skills through peeling and placing stickers.
Materials: White cardstock, black marker, large foam stickers or Halloween sticker sheets

Spooky-but-cute crafts for kids ages 5–9
These projects suit early elementary children who can cut shapes, follow simple steps, and enjoy adding creative details. Most take 20–40 minutes to complete.
Egg Carton Halloween Characters
Cut a 12-egg carton into individual cups. Paint them orange for pumpkins, white for ghosts, or green for Frankenstein heads. Add pipe cleaners for handles or spider legs, googly eyes, and marker details. Display in a row on a windowsill.
Time: 30 minutes plus drying | Difficulty: Easy
Toilet Paper Roll Monsters & Mummies
Paint cardboard tubes in monster colors. For mummies, wrap masking tape or white crepe paper around the roll. Add felt tongues, colorful construction paper horns, and googly eyes. These make a fun way to create a monster family.
Time: 25 minutes | Difficulty: Easy
Handprint Witches & Monsters
Trace hands on black construction paper for witch hair or monster claws. Use a free template for the witch’s face, then glue the handprints as wild hair. Write the child’s name and “Halloween 2024” on the back.
Time: 20 minutes | Difficulty: Easy
Simple Haunted Houses from Cereal Boxes
Cut a house silhouette from a cereal box. Paint it black or purple with acrylic paint. Cut window flaps that open to reveal tiny drawings of ghosts, candy corn, or halloween characters peeking out. Place an LED tea light inside for a spooky tree shadow effect.
Time: 40 minutes | Difficulty: Medium
Paper Chain Halloween Countdown
Cut orange, black, and purple construction paper into strips. Create 31 links, decorating some as paper pumpkins, bats, or ghosts with marker faces. Remove one link each day of October to count down to Halloween night.
Time: 30–45 minutes | Difficulty: Easy
Halloween crafts for older kids and tweens (ages 9–12)
This age group enjoys more detailed, “grown-up” crafts that can stay out as room decor all october long. These projects offer creative challenges and impressive results.
Macramé or Yarn Ghosts
Use white cotton cord or thick yarn to create hanging ghost decorations. Tie simple overhand knots to form the head shape, then trim the fringe into flowing “ghost tails.” Add blush to the cheeks with pastel chalk. Hang from a branch or embroidery hoop for a spooky yet stylish display.
Display idea: Create a group of three in different sizes for a bookshelf arrangement.
Spiderweb String Art on Cardboard
Print or draw a web outline on thick cardboard. Punch holes along the lines with a thumbtack (adult supervision required). Weave white yarn through the holes to create a dimensional spiderweb. Add a pipe cleaner spider in one corner.
Display idea: Frame in a shadow box or hang on a bedroom door.
Rock Painting
Collect flat stones and paint them as ghosts, black cat faces, candy corn, or mini monsters using acrylic paint. Add details with white paint or paint pens. Optionally glue small magnets on the back to create fridge decorations.
Display idea: Arrange in a bowl on the coffee table or use as garden path markers.
DIY Potion Bottles
Reuse small glass bottles or jars from the recycling bin. Mix colored water with glitter and drop in plastic spiders or eyeballs from a craft store. Create labels with names like “Bat Brew – 31.10.2024” or “Witch’s Tears.” Seal lids with hot glue (adult step).
Display idea: Line up on a shelf with a small LED string light behind them.
Simple Sewing Projects
Create felt candy-corn pouches or pumpkin coin purses using basic overhand stitches. Use blunt embroidery needles and thick embroidery thread in orange, black, and white. These make great halloween party favors or functional accessories. For more inspiration, check out creative ways to use glue paint in your craft projects.
Display idea: Use as a desk pencil holder or small treats container.
Teens’ Halloween craft ideas and DIY decor
Teens often prefer aesthetic, room-decor-focused, or wearable projects they can photograph and share with friends. These crafts offer sophisticated results that don’t feel “childish.”
Paper and Fabric Bunting
Cut black cat, bat, or ghost shapes from card or fabric scraps. Attach to twine with fabric tape or simple stitches. Drape above a bed, study desk, or across a mirror for instant halloween spirit in any room.
Macramé and Yarn Wall Hangings
Adapt the basic yarn ghost into a more detailed wall piece featuring multiple ghosts or paper pumpkins suspended from a wooden dowel. Add dried autumn leaves or fairy lights for extra atmosphere.
Advanced Pumpkin Decorating
Skip the carving tools and try no-carve techniques: paint pumpkins in pastel or monochrome color schemes, use paint pens for fine line art and fun halloween designs, or try napkin decoupage for a vintage look. These make perfect Instagram content.
Halloween Bath Bombs or Soaps
Use melt-and-pour soap base in pumpkin or bat silicone molds. Or create simple bath bombs with citric acid and baking soda, tinted orange, purple, or green. Add biodegradable glitter for sparkle.
Origami and Papercraft
Fold origami bats, pumpkins, and black cat shapes from patterned paper. Hang as a mobile above a desk or assemble as a night sky display on a bookshelf. This craft requires no glue or paint—just paper and patience.
Encourage teens to lead craft sessions for younger siblings or host a DIY night with friends using these more halloween crafts as the activity.
Eco-friendly and recycled Halloween crafts
Save money this October by reusing everyday packaging and natural materials instead of buying plastic decorations. These recycled materials crafts are just as impressive as store-bought options.
Cardboard Haunted Houses
Transform shoe boxes or shipping boxes into a haunted house complete with cut-out windows, hand-drawn brick textures, and crepe paper cobwebs. Place LED tea lights inside for a glowing effect that’s safe for young kids.
Materials: Cardboard boxes, black paint, scissors, LED tea lights
Upcycled Tin or Can Ghosts
Wash and dry empty cans, then paint them white. Add black marker faces and tie on streamers or ribbon as ghostly “tails.” Hang on the porch or from tree branches for outdoor fun ideas.
Yogurt Pot or Paper Cup Monsters
Paint clean yogurt pots or paper cups in monster colors. Glue on scrap-paper teeth, construction paper horns, and googly eyes. Turn them into pencil holders or treat cups for 31 October.
Nature-Based Crafts
- Stick-and-yarn spiderwebs: Lash sticks into a star shape and weave yarn between them
- Leaf ghosts: Paint fallen leaves white, add marker faces, and hang as a mobile
- Pinecone bats: Glue black paper bat wings to pinecones and hang on branches
Tip: Keep a dedicated “Halloween craft box” and start collecting clean recyclables from September onward. Egg cartons, cardboard tubes, and glass jars all become valuable craft supplies.

Glow-in-the-dark and light-up Halloween projects
Glowing crafts are especially fun way to celebrate during early dark evenings in late October. All projects here use safe LED options rather than open flames.
Glow Stick Mason Jar Lanterns
Fill clean mason jars with activated glow sticks in orange, green, or purple. Alternatively, paint jack o lantern faces on the outside of jars and place LED tea lights inside for a safer, reusable option.
Glitter Glue Spiderweb Window Clings
Draw web designs on plastic file sleeves using thick glitter glue. Let dry overnight (24+ hours works best). Peel carefully and stick to windows where they’ll catch the light. These are reusable year after year.
Paper Luminaries
Color printed Halloween scenes on A4 paper—haunted houses, flying bats, or full moons. Tape the paper into cylinders and place over battery tea lights. Line them along a windowsill or hallway for an atmospheric glow.
Frankenstein or Monster Jar Luminaries
Paint small jars green or purple for monster faces, or orange for pumpkins. Cut black paper “hair” for Frankenstein or add googly eyes. Insert LED candles for use as nightlights in children’s bedrooms.
Safety note: Always use battery-operated lights rather than real candles around children. Glow sticks should not be opened or cut—supervise younger children to prevent this.
Pumpkin crafts and no-carve alternatives
Traditional pumpkin carving tools aren’t always child-safe. These options let kids involved in pumpkin decorating without sharp knives, making them perfect for younger children.
Sticker and Marker Pumpkins
Let young kids decorate mini pumpkins with vinyl stickers, foam shapes, and washable markers. The results are colorful, mess-free, and each pumpkin becomes unique to its creator.
Yarn-Wrapped Pumpkins
Wrap orange yarn tightly around inflated balloons, coating the yarn with diluted white glue. Let dry completely overnight, then pop and remove the balloons. The result is hollow yarn pumpkins perfect for table centerpieces.
Pipe Cleaner Pumpkin Decorations
Twist orange, green, and black pipe cleaners into pumpkin spirals, curly vines, and jack o lantern faces. Attach to real or faux pumpkins as removable decorations that can be reused next year.
Sand Art Pumpkins
Brush school glue onto cardboard pumpkin shapes or small craft pumpkins. Sprinkle colored sand in stripes or patterns, then shake off the excess. This creates beautiful textured colorful halloween decor.
Paper Pumpkin Lanterns
Cut 15–20 strips of orange card. Form into a sphere by joining the strips at top and bottom with brads or staples. Add a green construction paper stem and hang as indoor lanterns—no fire risk and totally kid-made.
Spider, bat, and skeleton crafts
Creepy-crawlies are classic Halloween symbols. These crafts turn them into super cute versions that work for kids who dislike scary imagery.
Pipe Cleaner Spiders
Bend eight legs from black or neon pipe cleaners and twist them around a pom pom body. Add small googly eyes. Clip finished spiders onto houseplants, garlands, or curtains for instant spooky atmosphere.
Spider Pumpkins
Paint mini pumpkins black. Glue on googly eyes of various sizes. Insert four pipe cleaners on each side for legs. Create a whole spider family in different sizes for tabletop display.
Cotton Swab Skeletons
Cut cotton swabs into various lengths for ribs and limbs. Arrange on black construction paper to form a skeleton body. Print or draw a skull for the head. Add a name and date for a personalized halloween cards gift.
Paper Strip 3D Spiders
Cut black card into strips. Loop and glue to form a round body. Attach eight folded paper legs and googly eyes. These tabletop spiders are sturdier than flat versions.
Paper or Cardboard Bats
Trace bat wings templates onto cereal-box cardboard. Paint black for traditional bats or use rainbow colors for a friendlier look. String together as fluttery garlands for doorways or windows.
Haunted houses, witches, and monster makes
Classic halloween characters—haunted houses, witches, zombies, and friendly monsters—make perfect themes for multiple crafts that work together as a collection.
Paper Haunted Houses with Flap Windows
Print or draw a tall house on black paper. Cut window and door flaps that open to reveal tiny drawings of ghosts, candy corn, or halloween characters peeking out. Glue onto colorful construction paper backgrounds.
Popsicle Stick Witch Doors or Windows
Glue popsicle sticks into a rectangle shape. Paint purple, black, or orange with acrylic paint. Add a paper cauldron, broom, or “Do Not Enter” sign. Lean against a wall or hang as part of a spooky tree display.
Wooden Spoon or Paper Tube Witches
Decorate wooden spoon handles or cardboard tubes with felt hats, yarn hair, and painted faces. These become finger puppets or storytelling props perfect for Halloween night entertainment.
Monster Handprints and Paper Bag Puppets
Turn handprints into silly monsters by adding horns, teeth, and multiple eyes. Create paper bag puppets from lunch bags with layered paper teeth, construction paper horns, and spots. Use for a short Halloween play or story time.
These crafts are perfect props for a simple Halloween performance on the evening of 31 October—let kids put on a monster show for the whole family.
STEM and sensory Halloween activities
Mixing science and crafts keeps kids engaged and encourages curiosity around the holiday. These hands-on activities combine creativity with learning.
Homemade Slime in Halloween Colors
Create a basic slime using white glue, contact lens solution, and food coloring. Make batches in orange, green, and purple. Add plastic spiders, eyeballs, or glitter for extra halloween spirit. Store in labeled jars.
Adult supervision required for slime ingredients.
Bubbling “Witch’s Brew” Cauldrons
Set up plastic cauldrons or bowls with baking soda. Let kids add vinegar mixed with food coloring for bubbling reactions. Throw in glitter, plastic bones, and toy bugs. This is an easy project with big wow factor.
Playdough Mats
Print haunted houses, pumpkins, or cauldron outlines on A4 paper and laminate them. Kids build features—pumpkin faces, bubbles in the cauldron, ghosts in windows—using homemade or store-bought playdough.
Popsicle Stick Catapults
Build simple lever catapults using popsicle sticks and rubber bands. Launch pom pom “eyeballs” or paper bats into a cardboard target decorated as a haunted house. This combines fine motor skills with basic physics.
Sensory Bins
Fill large tubs with dried black beans, orange-dyed rice, or dried pasta. Add plastic bones, mini pumpkins, plastic spiders, and scoops. This fun activity is especially engaging for toddlers and preschoolers exploring textures.
Halloween crafts by setting: home, classroom, and parties
Craft choices change depending on whether you’re at home with one child, managing a classroom of 25, or hosting a party. Here are the best ideas for each situation.
At Home
More involved or messy projects work well:
- Papier-mâché treat bowls (multi-day project)
- Elaborate cardboard haunted houses
- Multi-day yarn pumpkins
- Painting projects using acrylic paint
- Hot glue projects (adult supervision)
In the Classroom
Low-mess, quick-drying ideas are essential:
- Pre-cut paper bats for kids to decorate
- Coloring pages and printable template masks
- Simple handprint art on individual paper
- Sticker activities with minimal glue
- Pre-cut shapes ready for assembly
Prep tips: Label drying racks with student names, pre-cut all the supplies, and assign parent volunteers to manage glue and paint stations.
Halloween Parties
Crafts that double as activities and favors work best:
- Decorated treat bags kids fill and take home
- Small slime jars labeled with guest names
- Ghost lollipops wrapped during the party
- Mix-and-match monster blocks
- Simple halloween wreaths made from paper plates
Timing and rotations:
| Element | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Station time | 10–15 minutes per activity |
| Group size | 4–6 kids per table |
| Adult help | One volunteer per messy station (paint, glue) |
| Drying area | Designate a safe spot away from active play |
Safety tips and age-appropriate materials
Halloween crafts should feel fun and relaxed, with hazards minimized for different age groups. Keep these guidelines in mind as you plan.
Choose non-toxic, washable supplies
- Read labels on all paints, glues, and markers
- Use washable paint for toddlers who may mouth brushes
- Select glue sticks over liquid glue for younger children
- Consider plant-based or food-safe dyes for sensory activities
Supervise tools appropriately
- Provide safety scissors with rounded tips for preschoolers
- Reserve craft knives and hot glue guns for adults or teens
- Pumpkin carving tools require adult supervision even for older children
- Demonstrate proper scissor and tool handling before each session
Manage small parts carefully
- Keep googly eyes, beads, buttons, and magnets away from children under 3
- Offer alternatives: draw eyes with markers, use large foam stickers
- Store small items in sealed containers between craft sessions
- Count small items before and after activities
Protect surfaces and clothing
- Cover tables with old newspapers, wreath form backing, or wipe-clean cloths
- Use aprons or designate “craft clothes” (old t-shirts work perfectly)
- Have paper towels and wet wipes within reach
- Work on surfaces that can handle spills
Use safe lighting
- LED tea lights only—never real candles in children’s crafts
- Glow sticks must stay sealed; supervise to prevent cutting or biting
- Battery-operated fairy lights are safe for luminaries and displays
- Unplug or remove batteries when crafts aren’t being actively displayed
Planning a month of Halloween crafting
Rather than cramming all your crafting into one frantic day, spread projects across October for maximum fun and minimum stress. You’ll get to enjoy more halloween crafts without the overwhelm.
Create a simple October calendar
- Week 1: Pumpkin-themed crafts (paper pumpkins, yarn-wrapped pumpkins, sticker pumpkins)
- Week 2: Ghost and bat makes (handprint ghosts, paper bats, cotton wool ghosts)
- Week 3: Monsters and spiders (toilet roll monsters, pipe cleaner spiders, silly monsters)
- Week 4 (leading to 31 October): Decorations and luminaries (haunted houses, glow jar lanterns, final displays)
Stock a Halloween craft caddy
Keep these basics ready for spontaneous after-school sessions:
- Black, orange, and purple construction paper
- Glue sticks and a bottle of white school glue
- Googly eyes in various sizes
- Orange, black, and green pipe cleaners
- Yarn scraps
- Clean toilet rolls and egg cartons from your recycling bin
- Scissors (both adult and safety versions)
Create lasting memories
Date every craft—especially handprints, footprints, and first attempts at pumpkins. Store favorites in a dedicated box or photograph them before they get damaged. Looking back on past Halloweens and seeing how your kids have grown is one of the best rewards of a month spent crafting together.
This October, let love creating guide your family through the spooky season. Start with one quick craft from the list above, involve kids in choosing the next project, and before you know it, you’ll have a house full of handmade halloween decorations and a whole collection of happy memories.


