Few things stall a young writer faster than a blank page. The good news? Kids are bursting with ideas—they just need a little doorway in. The 50 prompts below are designed to do exactly that: spark a grin, an "ooh," or an immediate "wait, what happens next?" Use them at the kitchen table, in the classroom, or on a rainy afternoon.
How to use these prompts
There’s no wrong way, but a few things help. Let your writer pick the prompt that makes them light up—ownership matters more than order. Set a gentle timer (five to ten minutes is plenty for younger kids). And resist the urge to correct spelling on a first draft; the goal here is ideas flowing, not a perfect page.
Adventure & fantasy prompts
- You wake up and your bedroom door now opens onto a different place every morning. Where does it lead today?
- A dragon the size of a kitten lands on your windowsill and refuses to leave.
- You find a map in your backyard with a big red X on it. Write about what you dig up.
- Your shoes can suddenly run faster than a car—but only on Tuesdays.
- A door appears in the trunk of the oldest tree in the park. You open it…
- A backpack gives you one magic item each day. What do you get today, and how do you use it?
- The stars rearrange themselves to spell a message just for you. What does it say?
- You shrink to the size of an ant for one hour. Describe your journey across the kitchen.
- A friendly sea creature offers to show you the bottom of the ocean.
- You can talk to exactly one animal. Which do you choose, and what’s your first conversation?
Funny & silly prompts
- Write a recipe for the world’s worst sandwich.
- Your pet has been secretly running a business while you’re at school. What does it sell?
- Explain how to brush your teeth to an alien who has never seen a toothbrush.
- One morning, everything you say comes out as a song.
- The vegetables in the fridge are planning a revolt. Tell their story.
- Write about the day gravity took a break.
- Your homework ate your dog. Explain to your teacher what happened.
- Invent a brand-new holiday. How do people celebrate?
- You can only walk backward for an entire day. How does it go?
- Describe the silliest superhero ever and the very small problems they solve.
Everyday-life prompts
- Write about the best day you can possibly imagine, start to finish.
- Describe your favorite place using all five senses.
- Write a thank-you letter to someone who doesn’t know how much they helped you.
- What would you do with a whole day and no rules?
- Tell the story of a time you were brave—even just a little bit.
- Describe your family as if they were characters in a book.
- Write about a family tradition and why it matters to you.
- If you could teach the whole world one thing, what would it be?
- Write about a time you changed your mind about something.
- Describe the view from your favorite window.
Mystery & detective prompts
- Something has gone missing from your classroom. You’re on the case—who’s your first suspect?
- You find a note that says "Meet me where the day begins." Where do you go?
- A detective’s only clue is a single muddy footprint.
- The cookies disappeared overnight. Solve the mystery.
- You discover a secret door in your school. Where does it lead, and why is it hidden?
- The new kid at school has a very strange secret. How do you find out?
- Write about the quietest house on the street and the mystery inside it.
- You overhear half of a conversation. Fill in the rest.
- The town clock has started running backward. Investigate.
- Your dog keeps digging up the same spot in the yard. What’s buried there?
Big-imagination prompts
- If you could invent one thing to make the world better, what would it be?
- Write about a world where kids are in charge for a week.
- You get to design your own planet. What are the rules?
- Describe a color that doesn’t exist yet.
- Write a letter to yourself ten years from now.
- If your imagination were a place, what would it look like?
- You find a jar that collects sounds. What’s inside?
- Write about the last tree on Earth and the person who protects it.
- Borrow any character from any book for one day. Who, and what do you do?
- Describe the most wonderful machine you can dream up.
A few tips for grown-ups
Let kids talk the idea out loud before they write—some of the best stories start as a told tale. Keep the pressure low: a few sentences is a win for a beginner. And celebrate effort over polish. Spelling and grammar can come on the second pass; the first pass belongs to imagination.
If you’d love a ready-to-print version of prompts like these, my printable Writing Prompts Workbook gathers a whole stack of them in one place—perfect for classrooms, road trips, and quiet mornings.
