Journal Prompts for Kids: 40 Ideas to Build a Daily Writing Habit

A journal is one of the gentlest ways to grow a writer. There’s no grade, no "right" answer, and no audience to worry about—just a few quiet minutes to put thoughts on paper. The trick to making it stick isn’t discipline; it’s having something easy and inviting to write about. That’s where prompts come in.

Why journaling helps young writers

Daily journaling builds the muscle that matters most: getting words down without overthinking them. It grows vocabulary, sharpens observation, and—maybe best of all—gives kids a private place to sort out big feelings. A child who journals a few minutes a day stops seeing writing as a test and starts seeing it as a tool that belongs to them.

40 journal prompts for kids

Mix and match these, or work through them in order. A few sentences per prompt is plenty.

  1. What made you smile today?
  2. If you could change one thing about today, what would it be?
  3. Write about something you’re looking forward to.
  4. Who is someone you’re grateful for, and why?
  5. What is something you’re really good at?
  6. Describe your perfect weekend.
  7. What is a worry you’d like to let go of?
  8. If you could have any superpower for a day, what would you do with it?
  9. Write about a time you helped someone.
  10. What does your ideal bedroom look like?
  11. What is the bravest thing you’ve ever done?
  12. Describe a place where you feel completely safe.
  13. If today had a color, what would it be and why?
  14. What is something new you’d like to try?
  15. Write about your favorite memory with your family.
  16. What would you do if you were principal for a day?
  17. Who is your hero, and what makes them one?
  18. What is something kind someone did for you recently?
  19. If you could talk to your future self, what would you ask?
  20. What is the best advice you’ve ever been given?
  21. Describe your favorite meal in delicious detail.
  22. What is a goal you’re working toward?
  23. Write about a mistake that taught you something.
  24. What makes a good friend?
  25. If you could visit anywhere in the world, where would you go?
  26. What is something you used to be afraid of but aren’t anymore?
  27. Describe the sounds you can hear right now.
  28. What would your dream pet be like?
  29. Write about a time you felt really proud of yourself.
  30. What is one thing you’d like to learn this year?
  31. If you could invent a new school subject, what would it be?
  32. What does happiness feel like to you?
  33. Write a letter to someone you miss.
  34. What is your favorite thing about being your age?
  35. If you found a hundred dollars, what would you do with it?
  36. Describe a tradition you hope to keep when you grow up.
  37. What is something that always makes you laugh?
  38. Write about a dream you remember.
  39. What would you tell a new kid on their first day at your school?
  40. What are three things you love about today?

Tips for building the habit

Pick a consistent time—right after breakfast or just before bed works well—and keep it short. Five minutes is a real win, and short sessions are far easier to keep up than long ones. Let kids decorate their journal and keep it private; ownership and privacy are powerful motivators. And model it yourself when you can: a child who sees a grown-up writing learns that writing is just something people do.

If you’d like a done-for-you set of prompts to keep the habit going, my printable Writing Prompts Workbook is full of starters like these—ready for journals, classrooms, and quiet mornings alike.

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