10 LEGO Activities to Get Your Kids Moving

Assorted LEGO pieces

Photo by Xavi Cabrera on Unsplash

Active for Life has ten great ideas for using your family’s Lego stash as a base for games and activities to get kids moving.  

1. Lego Amazing Race  

Set up five stations with Lego pieces, a picture of something to be built, and a picture of a motion. In order to move from station to station, the item on the picture must be built with all of the pieces provided, and the action must be performed between each station. 

Examples:  

  • Station 1: Build a crazy creature and then bunny hop to Station 2. 

  • Station 2: Build a monster truck (be sure to include wheels at this station), then balance on a rope to Station 3.  

Remember, the Lego figures must be completed using every piece before moving to the next station.  

2. Lego bat 

Can your child build a bat strong enough to whack a ping pong ball across a table with a friend?  

3. Lego sorting relay 

Give each child a bag of assorted Lego in three to five different colours. 

Have them dump out the bags at the same time and then run one piece at a time to a bowl designated for each colour.  

After all the pieces have been sorted, each kid must build their own creations with bricks from each bowl.  

This activity can be timed for older kids or played just for fun, and with fewer bricks for the younger crowd.  

 4. Lego car painting 

Have your kids build a car, dip the wheels in washable paint, and then run the cars around large pieces of paper to make fun designs. Paint AND Lego? How could a kid resist? 

5. Lego maze 

Build a giant Lego maze to run cars or small animals through. Get creative with zigzagging and hairpin turns.  

6. Lego ring toss 

Build several Lego towers of differing heights on a Lego base plate to create a ring toss game. Use plastic bracelets for the rings. See if your child can get the ring on (or at least close to) each column.  

7. Lego bowling 

Get your child to build towers of different heights and have them attempt to knock them down with soft balls or beanbags. 

8. Lego “egg” & spoon 

As with a traditional egg & spoon game, players must balance an item from one spot to another without having it fall. If it does fall, the player has to start again. This game has a Lego twist: Put one brick on a spoon and see if your child can balance it from one end of a room to another. Once they’ve mastered walking with one brick, add another and see if they can keep up their balance. Keep adding and adding to see how many they can handle. Or have your child try with their other hand—left if they’re right-handed, or the other way around. 

9. Lego mini golf 

Build your very own miniature golf course indoors or out using Lego pieces, ping-pong balls, and small golf clubs, mini sticks, or spatulas. Use Lego to build tunnels in a line, or spaced out in various patterns for older kids. Tunnels can be secured to the floor using painter’s tape. 

10. Lego freeze dance 

Don’t let Lego stop you from dancing! While the classic freeze dance game has kids freeze in place when the music stops, Lego freeze dance has a different twist. 

Every player is given the same number of pieces of Lego on a table or other hard surface away from the dance floor. When the music stops, players must run to their collection of Lego and build a wall or tower using as many pieces as they can. As soon as the music restarts, players must leave their Lego and dance away until the next break in the music. For older kids, the one with the smallest number of pieces wins the game.  

The www.activeforlife.com has many other ideas for activities to get children moving and enjoying themselves, using simple props, either inexpensive or items that can be found around the house…like socks! This page includes sock ball soccer, sock ball basketball, bowling with sock balls, sock ball dodgeball, sock ball batting, and sock ball throw and catch. You can even download and print a poster of these sock ball games for your refrigerator or family bulletin board at home. 

A particularly useful thing about the Active For Life site is that it is easy to search the whole site by age range to find activities at the right developmental age for your children. 

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