Sensory Play · Ages 1–4 · At Home
Sensory play can look like simple mess — but for a toddler, it's some of the most valuable play there is. Scooping, squishing, and pouring builds the brain, calms big feelings, and develops fine motor skills all at once. Here are 15 toddler sensory activities you can set up at home today.
Why sensory play matters so much
Toddlers learn through their senses first. When a child squishes dough or pours water, they're not just playing — they're building neural connections, testing how the world works, and developing the small-muscle control behind later skills like writing.
Sensory play is also genuinely regulating. The repetitive, tactile nature of scooping rice or swirling foam calms an overwhelmed toddler and helps an under-stimulated one focus. It's one of the few activities that can both wind a toddler down and draw them in. Sensory play at home needs no special kit — just a few household basics.
Free printable download
Get the Free Ultimate Toddler Starter Pack
A short guide on how toddlers actually learn through play, plus colouring pages, tracing sheets and matching games, a no-prep activity menu, a weekly planner, and a bonus “I did it!” progress chart — all free.
Download the Free Starter Pack →Dry sensory play
01. Rice sensory bin
Dry rice in a tub with scoops, cups, and small toys. The classic calm sensory activity.
02. Dried bean or pasta tub
Beans and pasta offer different sounds and textures to scoop and pour.
03. Texture basket
A basket of safe household objects — a sponge, a brush, a scarf — for exploring textures.
04. Sand tray
Indoor play sand for drawing, scooping, and burying small treasures.
05. Pom-pom play
Soft pom-poms to sort, transfer with tongs, and squeeze.
Wet and messy sensory play
06. Water pouring station
A tub of water with cups, funnels, and jugs for calm pouring practice.
07. Cloud dough
Flour mixed with a little oil makes a soft, mouldable, sensory-rich material.
08. Shaving foam tray
A blob of foam to swirl, draw in, and squish across a tray.
09. Edible finger paint
Yoghurt with a drop of food colour — safe, sensory painting for younger toddlers.
10. Ice play
Freeze small toys in ice and free them with warm water and a paintbrush.
Not sure printables count as real play?
The free Ultimate Toddler Starter Pack includes a short guide — How Toddlers Actually Learn Through Play — plus a no-prep activity menu that shows you how to turn every printable into hands-on, playful learning.
Get the Free Starter PackSensory play with a learning twist
11. Sensory letter hunt
Hide foam letters in rice and find and name them — literacy plus sensory play.
12. Colour-sorting sensory bin
Sort coloured objects out of a sensory base into matching cups.
13. Scented playdough
Add a little spice or extract to playdough for an extra sensory dimension.
14. Pouring and measuring
Cups and jugs in water build early maths concepts — full, empty, more, less.
15. Nature sensory tray
Leaves, pine cones, and pebbles for a natural-textures exploration tray.
How to make sensory play stress-free
1. Contain the mess
Set up on a tray, a wipe-clean mat, or outdoors. Containment makes you relaxed and the play better.
2. Supervise closely
Always supervise, especially with younger toddlers who still mouth materials — and choose taste-safe options if needed.
3. Let them lead
Resist directing sensory play. The exploring, with no goal, is exactly where the value sits.
4. Keep sessions short
Ten to twenty minutes is plenty. Pack it away while it's still fun.
Frequently asked questions
Isn't sensory play just making a mess?
It looks messy, but it's serious developmental work — building the brain, fine motor skills, and emotional regulation. The mess is the means, not the point.
My toddler still puts everything in their mouth. Is sensory play safe?
Yes, with the right materials. Choose taste-safe options — edible finger paint, cooked pasta, oat-based dough — and supervise closely.
How often should toddlers do sensory play?
A few times a week is great, but even daily is fine. It's calming, regulating, and endlessly beneficial.
My toddler dislikes messy textures. What can I do?
That's common. Start with dry sensory play like rice or pasta, offer tools so they don't have to touch directly, and let them explore at their own pace.
Where's the sensory play guide?
A printable sensory play guide is included in the free Ultimate Toddler Starter Pack, with setup ideas and material lists.
The Ultimate Toddler Starter Pack
Playful learning, not a pile of worksheets
Everything in one free download: the “How Toddlers Learn Through Play” guide, colouring pages, tracing sheets and matching games, a no-prep activity menu, a weekly activity planner, and a bonus “I did it!” progress chart.
Download the Free Starter Pack →Free forever · No spam · Unsubscribe any time
From the GrowlyNest family — helping you raise happy, curious, capable toddlers through play.
You're getting — completely free
The Ultimate Toddler Starter Pack
Here's how to get it
It arrives in 1–2 minutes — check your inbox now.
If you don't see the "Gift File" check your Promotions or Spam folder. Drag it to your main inbox so future emails reach you.
Loading Viewer...