January is a weird month, isn’t it?
The holidays are over. The decorations are down. The weather is cold. The days are short. And you still have approximately 47 more days of winter to survive.
I used to dread January. All that excitement and then… nothing. Just gray skies and bored kids and too much time indoors.
But here’s what I’ve learned — January doesn’t have to be boring. It’s actually the perfect month for cozy activities, winter science experiments, and slow mornings with hot chocolate.
This list of 31 January activities will get you through the month one day at a time. One for every day. No fancy supplies. No elaborate setups. Just real activities for real winter days.
Why January Activities Need to Be Flexible
January weather is unpredictable. One day it’s snowing. The next day it’s just cold and rainy. The next day it’s somehow both.
The best January activities:
- Work indoors or outdoors depending on weather
- Embrace winter themes — snow, ice, cold, coziness
- Use what you already have — no special shopping required
- Keep kids moving when they’re stuck inside
FYI, I check the weather each morning and pick accordingly. Snowy day? Outside fun. Bitter cold? Indoor cozy activities.
31 January Activities to Try
Indoor Warm-Ups
1. Build a Blanket Fort
Grab blankets, pillows, and chairs. Build the biggest, coziest fort you can. Add string lights if you have them. Read books inside. Eat snacks inside. Nap inside. This will occupy them for hours.
2. Hot Chocolate Bar
Set out mugs, hot chocolate, and toppings — marshmallows, whipped cream, sprinkles, candy canes if you have leftovers, cinnamon sticks. Let everyone create their own masterpiece. Sip slowly. Stay warm.
3. Indoor Obstacle Course
Use pillows to crawl over, chairs to go under, tape lines to balance on, and stuffed animals to jump over. Time each run. Try to beat your record. Burns off that cooped-up energy.
4. Movie Marathon Day
Pick a theme — all Disney, all animals, all superheroes. Make popcorn. Build that blanket fort again. Watch three movies back to back. No guilt. It’s January.
5. Board Game Afternoon
Pull out all the board games. Play one after another. Let everyone pick their favorite. Keep score if you’re competitive. Snack throughout.
Snow & Ice Fun (If You Have Snow)
6. Build a Snow Family
Don’t stop at one snowman. Build a whole family. Snow mom, snow dad, snow baby, snow dog. Use sticks for arms, rocks for eyes, and whatever you have for accessories.
7. Make Snow Angels
Flop down in fresh snow. Wave arms and legs. Stand up carefully. Admire your angel. Make a whole flock.
8. Snow Painting
Fill spray bottles with water and a few drops of food coloring. Spray the snow. Create snow art. Watch colors mix. Way more fun than plain white snow.
9. Catch Snowflakes
Go outside with black paper or dark fabric. Catch snowflakes. Look at them with a magnifying glass before they melt. See the patterns. No two alike, right?
10. Snow Volcano
Build a snow volcano around a small cup or container. Put baking soda inside. Add vinegar mixed with red food coloring. Watch it “erupt.” Science in the snow.
11. Frozen Bubble Experiment
Blow bubbles on a very cold day (below freezing). Watch them freeze mid-air or land as frozen bubbles. Gorgeous and magical.
Cold-Weather Outdoor Fun (No Snow Needed)
12. Winter Nature Walk
Walk around the neighborhood. Look for signs of winter — bare trees, animal tracks, frost, icicles. Take photos. Collect interesting sticks or rocks.
13. Look for Animal Tracks
After snow or in mud, look for tracks. Try to identify them. Rabbit? Squirrel? Bird? Dog? Follow them if you can.
14. Feed the Birds
Make simple bird feeders — pine cones rolled in peanut butter and birdseed, or cheerios strung on yarn. Hang them outside. Watch from the window. Count how many birds visit.
15. Go on a Color Hunt
Winter can look gray and white. Challenge kids to find colors outside. A red berry. A blue bird. A green pine tree. Take photos of every color you find.
16. Shadow Tracing
On a sunny winter day, go outside with chalk and paper. Trace each other’s shadows. Come back later and see how they moved.
17. Ice Sculpture Making
Freeze water in different containers — bowls, cups, molds. Pop out the ice shapes. Arrange them outside. Watch them slowly melt. Add food coloring for extra fun.
Winter Arts & Crafts
18. Paper Snowflakes
Fold paper, cut shapes, unfold. Tape them on windows. Make a whole blizzard. Every one is different, which is half the magic.
19. Cotton Ball Snowman
Glue cotton balls on paper in a snowman shape. Add stick arms, googly eyes, a paper hat. Fluffy and cute.
20. Winter Sensory Bin
Fill a bin with cotton balls (snow), small winter toys, scoops, and cups. Add sparkly pom poms for fun. Let them explore. Contains the mess.
21. Ice Cube Painting
Freeze water with food coloring in ice cube trays. Give kids paper and let them “paint” as the ice melts. Cool colors, cool process.
22. Salt Painting
Draw designs with glue on dark paper. Sprinkle with salt. Drop watercolors onto the salt. Watch the color spread. Beautiful winter art.
23. Popsicle Stick Snowflakes
Glue popsicle sticks together in snowflake shapes. Paint white or blue. Add glitter. Hang as decorations.
Cozy Indoor Learning
24. Learn About Hibernation
Read books about animals that hibernate. Act out hibernating — curl up and “sleep,” then wake up in spring. Talk about why animals sleep all winter.
25. Winter Books Marathon
Gather all your winter-themed books. Read them all in one day. Pile on the couch with blankets and hot chocolate.
26. Make a Winter Playlist
Pick songs that feel like winter — maybe “Let It Go,” “Winter Wonderland,” instrumental calm music. Listen while you craft or play.
27. Plan a Summer Day
It’s cold outside. Dream about warm days. Draw pictures of what you’ll do in summer. Make a bucket list. Hang it on the fridge.
28. Write Thank You Notes
If you received holiday gifts, write thank you notes. Draw pictures inside. Practice gratitude. Mail them together.
New Year Connections
29. New Year Reflections
Talk about the past year. What was your favorite memory? What did you learn? What made you laugh? Write or draw answers. Keep them.
30. Make a 2026 Goals Jar
Write simple goals for the year on slips of paper. “Learn to tie shoes.” “Make a new friend.” “Read 20 books.” Put them in a jar. Read one each month.
31. Look Ahead to Spring
On the last day of January, make a list of things you’re excited about in spring. Warmer weather. Flowers. Longer days. Draw pictures. Dream together.
January Books to Read
Add these to your library pile:
- “The Snowy Day” by Ezra Jack Keats — Classic, beautiful, perfect
- “Owl Moon” by Jane Yolen — Gorgeous winter night story
- “Snowmen at Night” by Caralyn Buehner — Imaginative, fun
- “The Mitten” by Jan Brett — Animals squeeze into a mitten
- “Over and Under the Snow” by Kate Messner — Animals in winter
Read one every night. Builds routine and winter wonder.
January Sensory Bins
Sensory bins save winter afternoons. Try these:
- Snow bin: Cotton balls, white pom poms, plastic snowflakes, small winter animals
- Ice bin: Real ice cubes, scoops, cups, spoons (put a towel under)
- Arctic bin: White rice, polar bears, penguins, blue gems for water
- Winter animal bin: Fake snow, small forest animals, sticks, pine cones
Rotate them. Keeps things fresh.
What to Do on Sick Days
January is prime sick season. When someone’s down:
- Gentle movies — quiet, calm, familiar
- Puzzles on a tray in bed
- Audiobooks — close eyes and listen
- Coloring — simple, soothing
- Tea and toast — comfort food
No pressure to do anything. Rest is the activity.
When Cabin Fever Hits
You’ll know it when you see it. Bouncing off walls. Fighting over nothing. Whining about everything.
Solutions:
- Dance party — loud music, wild movement
- Bath time — even in the middle of the day
- Flashlight games — turn off lights, play with shadows
- Indoor camping — tent in the living room
- Run around the house — timed laps, burn energy
January Self-Care for Parents
Let’s be real — January is hard on parents too. The holidays are over. The weather is gray. The kids are restless.
Take care of yourself:
- Lower your expectations — survival counts as success
- Accept help — if someone offers, say yes
- Get outside — even five minutes helps
- Hot coffee — drink it while it’s hot, even if you have to hide
- Bedtime — go early when you can
You can’t pour from an empty cup. January is about getting through. Be kind to yourself.
Final Thoughts
January doesn’t have to be the month we just survive. It can be the month we slow down, get cozy, and connect. The month of forts and hot chocolate and snowflakes on black paper.
Pick 5-6 activities from this list that sound doable. Maybe the blanket fort and the snow painting and the winter books. See what your kids love. Follow their lead.
Some days you’ll do all the things. Other days you’ll just make it to bedtime. Both count.
Now go make some January memories. 🙂