Story Starters for Kids: 30 First Sentences That Beg to Be Finished

Sometimes a young writer doesn’t need a whole idea—just a running start. That’s what a story starter is: a single opening sentence so inviting that finishing it feels less like an assignment and more like an itch you have to scratch. Hand a kid one of these, and watch them lean in.

What makes a good story starter?

The best openers drop the reader straight into a moment that’s already moving. They raise a question the writer can’t help but answer: who, why, what next? Notice that none of the lines below explain themselves—they trust the writer to take the wheel.

30 story starters to finish

  1. The note was still warm when I picked it up.
  2. Nobody else seemed to notice that the moon was the wrong color.
  3. I had exactly one rule, and I had just broken it.
  4. The new student never blinked. Not once.
  5. The door at the end of the hall had never been there before.
  6. "Don’t look behind you," my little sister whispered.
  7. It started, as most strange things do, with a knock at the wrong door.
  8. The map was drawn in my own handwriting, but I’d never seen it before.
  9. Everyone in town agreed never to talk about what happened at the lake.
  10. The dog brought back a stick, then a shoe, then something that definitely wasn’t a stick.
  11. I found the key taped under my desk with my name on it.
  12. The lights in the science room were on, and it was midnight.
  13. She handed me the box and said, "Whatever you do, keep it closed."
  14. The first snow of the year fell straight up.
  15. My grandfather’s old radio only ever played one station—from fifty years ago.
  16. The substitute teacher knew things about us she couldn’t possibly know.
  17. I woke up with the answer to a question nobody had asked yet.
  18. The treehouse hadn’t been touched in years, so why was the light on?
  19. Every clock in the house stopped at the same minute.
  20. The library book was overdue by a hundred years.
  21. "You’re it," said a voice, but there was no one there.
  22. The footprints in the garden led up the wall and stopped.
  23. I traded my lunch for a marble that turned out to be much more than a marble.
  24. The carnival arrived overnight, and no one had built it.
  25. My reflection waved first.
  26. The recipe called for one ingredient I’d never heard of.
  27. On my tenth birthday, I finally learned why we never opened the attic.
  28. The whole class got the same dream the same night.
  29. There was a thirteenth step on the staircase that morning.
  30. I pressed the button that said "Do Not Press," obviously.

How to stretch a starter into a story

Once the first sentence is down, a few nudges keep the momentum going. Ask your writer: who is telling this story, and how do they feel right now? What does the character want, and what’s in the way? Try the "and then… but… so…" trick—it turns a list of events into an actual plot. And remind them that a story can stop anywhere; a great ending is just a good question answered or a smile earned.

Keep this list somewhere handy—a fridge, a notebook, a classroom wall—and pull one out whenever "I don’t know what to write" shows up. For a printable set you can hand out by the dozen, my Writing Prompts Workbook has you covered.

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