50 Montessori Activities for Toddlers (1-3 Years) [2026]

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50 Montessori Activities for Toddlers (1-3 Years) [2026]
TL;DR

This guide covers 50 Montessori-aligned activities for toddlers aged 1-3, organized into 8 categories: practical life, sensory exploration, language development, math and logic, art and creativity, outdoor activities, water play, and cooking. Most require materials you already have at home and take under 5 minutes to set up.

The toddler years — roughly 12 months to 3 years — are when Montessori truly shines. Your child is driven by an overwhelming need to do things themselves. They want to pour, carry, stack, sort, clean, open, close, push, pull, and generally participate in everything they see you doing. Traditional parenting often battles this impulse (“No, don’t touch that!”). Montessori channels it.

Maria Montessori called this period the time of the “absorbent mind,” when children soak up their environment effortlessly. The activities you provide during this window shape skills, habits, and neural pathways that last a lifetime.

This guide gives you 50 specific activities organized by category. Most use items you already own. All follow core Montessori principles — purposeful, real, child-led, and focused on building independence. Use this alongside our picks for the best Montessori toys for 1-year-olds and 2-year-olds.

How to Use This Guide

Do not try to do all 50 activities. Choose 4-6 that match your child’s current age and interests. Set them up on a low shelf where your child can choose freely. Rotate every 1-2 weeks. Observe which activities create deep concentration — those are telling you what your child’s brain needs right now.

Setup for each activity: Place all materials on a tray or in a basket so the activity is self-contained. Show it once slowly. Then step back.


Practical Life Activities (1-15)

Practical life is the heart of Montessori for toddlers. These activities build concentration, coordination, independence, and order — the four pillars Maria Montessori identified as essential for all later learning.

1. Pouring Dry Beans

Age: 12-18 months | What you need: Two small pitchers, dry beans, a tray

Pour beans from one pitcher to the other. The tray catches spills. Start with large beans (easier to clean up) and progress to rice and eventually water.

2. Spooning Transfer

Age: 12-18 months | What you need: Two bowls, a large spoon, cotton balls or pompoms

Scoop from one bowl to the other using a spoon. This is the precursor to self-feeding and develops the wrist rotation used in writing.

3. Opening and Closing Containers

Age: 12-24 months | What you need: 5-6 containers with different closures — screw lids, snap lids, hinged boxes, zippered pouches

Each container teaches a different hand movement. The child works through them left to right, opening and closing each one. Place a small object inside each as a reward.

4. Putting On and Removing Shoes

Age: 15-24 months | What you need: Child’s own shoes, a low bench or chair

Rather than rushing through shoe-on/shoe-off at the door, make it an activity. Set up a bench with their shoes underneath. Show the process once. Give them time.

5. Sweeping with a Small Broom

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: Child-sized broom and dustpan, small pieces of paper torn on the floor

Tear a few pieces of paper and scatter them in a defined area. Show the child how to sweep into the dustpan. They will not be perfect — the point is practice, not perfection.

6. Wiping a Table

Age: 15-24 months | What you need: A small sponge, a spray bottle with water, a child-height table

Spray a small amount of water on the table. The child wipes it dry with the sponge. Circular motions and left-to-right patterns both develop motor coordination. This also gives them a sense of genuine contribution.

7. Folding Washcloths

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: 3-4 small washcloths or hand towels, a basket

Show the child how to fold a washcloth in half. Then in half again. Place the folded cloths in the basket. This builds bilateral coordination (using both hands together) and sequencing.

8. Peeling Hard-Boiled Eggs

Age: 20-30 months | What you need: A hard-boiled egg, a small bowl for shells, a plate

Real food, real skill. The child peels the egg (messy but deeply satisfying), puts shells in the bowl, and eats the egg. This is exactly what Montessori meant by practical life: real work with real consequences.

9. Squeezing a Sponge

Age: 15-24 months | What you need: Two bowls, a sponge, water, a tray, a small towel

Fill one bowl with water. The child dips the sponge, squeezes water into the empty bowl. Builds hand strength critical for writing later. Include the towel for cleanup — an integrated part of the activity, not an afterthought.

10. Using Clothespins

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A small basket or bowl, 8-10 wooden clothespins

The child clips clothespins to the edge of the basket. The pinching motion strengthens the same muscles used for pencil grip. For added challenge, hang a small line and clip cloths to it.

11. Buttoning Practice

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: A buttoning frame or a shirt with large buttons

Either use a Montessori dressing frame or simply lay out a large-buttoned shirt. The child practices buttoning and unbuttoning. This is real dressing independence — not a toy version of it.

12. Sorting Silverware

Age: 20-30 months | What you need: A silverware tray, child-safe spoons, forks, and butter knives

After washing dishes (or as a standalone activity), the child sorts clean silverware into the correct compartments. Classification, matching, and real contribution to household work.

13. Watering Plants

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A small watering can (filled to a manageable weight), a houseplant

Show the child how to pour water at the base of the plant. They learn care for living things, pouring control, and responsibility. Let them check the soil — if dry, water; if wet, wait. This is scientific observation in its simplest form.

14. Spreading with a Knife

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: A child-safe knife (butter knife), soft spread (cream cheese, butter, jam), bread or crackers

Spreading is a complex motor skill: hold the bread with one hand, spread with the other, apply appropriate pressure. Start with soft spreads on sturdy crackers and progress to bread.

15. Zipping and Snapping

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: Jackets, bags, or pouches with zippers and snaps

Practice dressing skills on their own clothing or on a dressing frame. Every zipper they close independently is a small victory of self-reliance.


Sensory Exploration Activities (16-24)

The Montessori sensory curriculum refines the child’s ability to observe, discriminate, and classify using all five senses. These activities isolate one sense at a time.

16. Texture Matching

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: Pairs of fabric squares in different textures (velvet, sandpaper, silk, burlap, corduroy, fleece)

Make two of each texture. Mix them up. The child feels and matches pairs. For added difficulty, try matching with eyes closed — isolating touch completely.

17. Sound Shakers

Age: 15-30 months | What you need: 6-8 identical opaque containers filled in pairs (rice, bells, beans, sand)

Shake and match containers by sound. Mark the bottoms of matching pairs with the same color for self-correction. This refines auditory discrimination.

18. Smelling Jars

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: Small jars with cotton balls soaked in scents — vanilla, cinnamon, lemon, coffee, mint, lavender

The child smells each jar and describes or categorizes the scents. Can you make pairs for matching? This develops the olfactory sense, which is rarely targeted by conventional toys.

19. Mystery Bag

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A cloth bag, 5-6 familiar objects (spoon, ball, block, key, clothespin, pine cone)

Place objects in the bag. The child reaches in, feels an object without looking, and identifies it. Stereognostic sense — identifying objects through touch alone — is a classic Montessori sensory exercise.

20. Color Tablets (DIY)

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: Paint chip samples from a hardware store (two of each color)

Free from any paint counter. Start with the three primary colors (two reds, two blues, two yellows). The child matches pairs. Progress to secondary colors, then shades and gradients.

21. Temperature Bottles

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: 4-6 small metal containers filled with water at different temperatures (cold, cool, warm, hot — nothing dangerous)

The child arranges bottles from coldest to warmest. This refines the thermic sense. Use metal containers because they conduct temperature better than plastic.

22. Weight Sorting

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: 4-6 identical containers filled with different weights (sand, cotton, coins, water, rice, pebbles)

The child holds one in each hand and sorts from lightest to heaviest. Since the containers look identical, they must rely entirely on the baric (weight) sense.

23. Sensory Bin: Rice or Beans

Age: 12-24 months | What you need: A large shallow container, dry rice or beans, scoops, cups, funnels, small toys to bury

Fill the bin and provide tools. The child scoops, pours, buries, and discovers. This is open-ended sensory play with a Montessori twist — include specific tools that develop targeted skills (tongs for grip, funnels for pouring precision). A set like the Rainbow Stack Set 40pc adds colorful stacking and sorting elements to sensory play.

24. Rough and Smooth Boards

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A board with alternating strips of sandpaper and smooth wood (or smooth cardboard and textured paper)

The child runs their fingers across the board and identifies “rough” and “smooth.” This is a direct preparation for the sandpaper letters used in Montessori reading instruction.


Language Activities (25-32)

Language explodes during the toddler years. These activities support vocabulary, communication, and early literacy without flashcards or screens.

25. Object Naming Basket

Age: 12-18 months | What you need: A basket with 5-6 real objects from a category (fruits, animals, vehicles, kitchen items)

Take out each object, name it clearly, let the child hold it. “This is an apple. Apple.” Simple, concrete vocabulary building. Use real objects, not pictures, whenever possible.

26. Three-Period Lesson Cards

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: 3-5 clear photographs or realistic images of familiar objects

The Montessori three-period lesson: (1) “This is a dog.” (2) “Show me the dog.” (3) “What is this?” Move through the three periods only when the child is ready. Do not rush to period three.

27. Book Basket Rotation

Age: 12-36 months | What you need: A low basket with 4-5 age-appropriate books, rotated weekly

Keep books accessible and face-out (front covers visible, not spines). Rotate regularly. Let the child choose which to read. Follow their interest — if they want the same book five times in a row, that repetition is building mastery.

28. Singing and Rhyming

Age: 12-36 months | What you need: Nothing — just your voice

Singing nursery rhymes, making up rhymes during daily routines, and emphasizing rhyming words develops phonological awareness — the ability to hear sound patterns in language, which is the foundation of reading.

29. Sound Games (I Spy)

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: Objects around the room

“I spy with my little eye something that starts with sss.” (Use the letter sound, not the letter name.) This is the Montessori approach to phonics — sound-based, concrete, and playful.

30. Storytelling with Objects

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: A few small figurines or objects

Create a simple story using physical objects. “The bear walked to the river. He saw a fish.” Move the objects as you narrate. Then invite the child to tell their own story.

31. Vocabulary Cards by Category

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: Printed photographs grouped by category (8-10 per set): animals, food, clothing, vehicles, body parts

Lay out cards and name each one. Sort by category. This builds both vocabulary and classification skills.

32. Conversational Narration

Age: 12-36 months | What you need: Nothing

Narrate what you are doing throughout the day: “I am cutting the apple. First I wash it. Then I cut it in half. See the seeds inside?” This exposes the child to rich, contextual language naturally embedded in real-world activity.


Math and Logic Activities (33-38)

Montessori math begins with concrete, physical experiences long before abstract numbers appear.

33. One-to-One Counting with Objects

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: A bowl of 10 small objects (acorns, stones, buttons), 10 small dishes or circles drawn on paper

Place one object on each dish while counting. “One. Two. Three.” The physical one-to-one correspondence is the foundation of number sense.

34. Size Grading

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: 5-8 objects of the same type in graduating sizes (nesting cups, stacking rings, boxes)

Arrange from smallest to largest or largest to smallest. The Pearhead Stacking Rainbow is a beautiful tool for this concept, or use nesting kitchen bowls for a free alternative.

35. Shape Sorting

Age: 12-24 months | What you need: A shape sorter (DIY or purchased)

The classic Melissa & Doug Shape Sorting Cube remains one of the best options available. It teaches shape discrimination, spatial reasoning, and problem-solving through self-correction — the wrong shape simply does not fit.

36. Pattern Making

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: Colored blocks, beads, or buttons

Create a simple pattern: red, blue, red, blue. Ask the child to continue it. Progress from AB patterns to ABB, ABC, and more complex sequences. Pattern recognition is foundational mathematical thinking.

37. Sorting by Attribute

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A collection of mixed objects

Sort by color, then by size, then by shape, then by material. The same set of objects can be sorted multiple ways, teaching flexible classification.

38. Number Sandpaper Cards

Age: 30-36 months | What you need: Cards with sandpaper numbers 1-10 glued on

The child traces the number shape with their fingers while you say the number name. Combine with the counting objects from activity 33 — match the card “3” with a group of 3 objects.


Art and Creativity Activities (39-43)

Montessori art is process-focused, not product-focused. The goal is not a pretty picture to hang on the fridge — it is the experience of creating.

39. Painting on an Easel

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: An easel (or paper taped to a wall), 2-3 paint colors, a brush, an apron, a cup of water for rinsing

Limit colors to avoid muddy mixing early on. Show how to dip, wipe excess, paint, rinse, switch colors. The process teaches sequence, color recognition, and motor control.

40. Playdough Work

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: Homemade playdough, rolling pin, cookie cutters, a work mat

Kneading, rolling, cutting, and shaping develop hand strength and creativity. Homemade playdough (flour, salt, water, cream of tartar, food coloring) costs pennies and lasts weeks.

41. Tearing and Gluing Paper

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: Colored paper, a glue stick, a base paper

The child tears paper into pieces (bilateral coordination) and glues them onto the base in any arrangement. The tearing motion strengthens the same hand muscles as cutting with scissors.

42. Cutting with Scissors

Age: 24-36 months | What you need: Child-safe scissors, paper strips (start narrow)

Start with single snips across narrow strips. Progress to cutting along a straight line, then curved lines, then shapes. Cutting is a Montessori practical life skill with direct academic application.

43. Stamp Art

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: Stamps made from cut potatoes, corks, sponges, or foam shapes; an ink pad or shallow dish of paint; paper

Stamping teaches the one-to-one concept (one press = one print), develops grip control, and creates satisfying patterns. Let the child experiment freely.


Outdoor Activities (44-46)

The outdoors is the largest, richest Montessori environment available — and it is free.

44. Nature Walk Collection

Age: 15-36 months | What you need: A small bag or basket

Walk slowly. Let the child lead. Collect interesting objects: leaves, sticks, rocks, flowers, feathers. Back home, sort and examine them. Name them. This is science, language, sensory exploration, and gross motor all in one activity.

45. Gardening

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: A small garden plot or container, seeds, a child-sized trowel, a watering can

Digging, planting, watering, and watching growth teaches patience, responsibility, and basic biology. Radishes and sunflowers grow fast enough to hold a toddler’s attention span.

46. Mud Kitchen

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: Old pots, pans, spoons, water, dirt, a table or surface at child height

A mud kitchen is open-ended sensory play with rich practical life elements. The child scoops, pours, stirs, measures, and creates. It is messy and magnificent.


Water Play Activities (47-48)

Water is endlessly fascinating to toddlers and offers unique learning opportunities.

47. Pouring Station (Water)

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A tray, two small pitchers, water, a sponge

The advanced version of the dry bean transfer. Water demands more control — too fast and it splashes, too tilted and it spills. Include the sponge as part of the activity, not cleanup.

48. Washing Activities

Age: 18-36 months | What you need: A small basin, warm soapy water, objects to wash (plastic animals, dishes, doll clothes, vegetables)

Washing dishes, washing vegetables for dinner, washing doll clothes — all are genuine practical life activities that happen to involve water. The child contributes real work while developing motor skills and independence.


Cooking Activities (49-50)

Cooking is the ultimate Montessori activity. It involves measuring, pouring, mixing, cutting, sequencing, patience, and produces a real, edible result.

49. Banana Slicing

Age: 18-30 months | What you need: A banana, a child-safe knife, a cutting board, a plate

Peel the banana (great fine motor practice). Cut into slices. Eat. This is one of the first cooking activities Montessori classrooms introduce because bananas are soft enough for a child-safe knife and the result is immediately rewarding.

50. Mixing and Stirring

Age: 15-30 months | What you need: A bowl, a spoon, ingredients to mix (pancake batter, salad dressing, scrambled eggs)

Hold the bowl steady with one hand. Stir with the other. Bilateral coordination, hand strength, and the satisfaction of contributing to a real meal. Even if the stirring is imperfect, include their contribution in the final product.


Setting Up Your Montessori Activity Space

You do not need a dedicated room. A single low shelf in a corner of the kitchen or living room works.

Essentials:

Rotation schedule: Every 1-2 weeks, observe which activities are untouched. Remove those. Add one new activity. Keep ones that still generate engagement.

The tray system: Each activity lives on its own tray with everything needed. The child carries the tray to their workspace, uses the activity, and returns the tray to the shelf. This builds order, responsibility, and independence.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Offering too many choices. More is not better. Four well-chosen activities beat twenty scattered ones.

Correcting too quickly. If the child pours beans on the floor, wait. They might pick them up. They might explore the scattered beans. Correct only when safety is at stake.

Choosing activities above their level. An activity that creates frustration is not building resilience — it is building avoidance. If your child cannot succeed at least partially on their own, the activity is too advanced. Try again next month.

Skipping practical life. It is tempting to jump to “educational” activities like letters and numbers. But Montessori was clear: practical life comes first. A child who can pour water, button a shirt, and sweep the floor has the concentration, coordination, and confidence to tackle academics later.

Forgetting to model slowly. When you demonstrate an activity, slow down dramatically. Do not talk while demonstrating — let the child watch your hands. Then invite them to try.

Beyond Activities: Building a Montessori Mindset

The activities in this guide are tools, but the real transformation happens in your approach. Montessori for toddlers is not about having the right toys on the shelf — it is about seeing your child as a capable person who deserves real work, real choices, and real respect.

When your toddler wants to help cook dinner, let them. When they insist on putting on their own shoes (slowly, incorrectly), give them time. When they pour water and miss the glass, hand them a sponge instead of a lecture.

For more on choosing the right materials to complement these activities, explore our guides to the best toys for 1-year-olds and best toys for 2-year-olds. And if you are wondering what actually makes a toy Montessori, that guide breaks down the principles behind everything on this page.

Fifty activities. Zero screens. One powerful philosophy. Start with whatever excites your child today, and let them lead the way.

Key Takeaways
  • 50 activities organized into 8 categories covering all areas of toddler development
  • Practical life activities (pouring, sweeping, dressing) are the foundation of Montessori for toddlers
  • Most activities require zero cost — use household items you already own
  • Set up 4-6 activities on low shelves and rotate every 1-2 weeks
  • Follow the child: observe interests, do not force, and never interrupt deep concentration

Frequently Asked Questions

What Montessori activities can I do with a 1-year-old?

One-year-olds thrive with simple activities: treasure baskets with safe household objects, putting balls into a box and finding them again, stacking 2-3 large blocks, transferring objects between containers, pulling scarves from a tissue box, and basic water play with cups and scoops. Focus on gross motor, cause and effect, and sensory exploration.

How long should a toddler do a Montessori activity?

Follow the child. A deeply engaged toddler might work on one activity for 15-30 minutes, while another day they may lose interest in 2 minutes. Both are normal. Montessori does not have time limits — if the child is focused and working purposefully, do not interrupt. If they walk away, that is fine too.

How many activities should I set out at once?

For toddlers, 4-6 activities on low shelves is ideal. Too many creates overwhelm and scattered attention. Rotate activities every 1-2 weeks, removing ones they have lost interest in and introducing one new option at a time. Less is more — a principle central to Montessori environments.

What if my toddler does the activity wrong?

In Montessori, there is no wrong if the child is engaged and safe. If they pour beans on the floor instead of into the bowl, they are still learning about gravity, texture, and cause and effect. Observe before correcting. If you need to redirect, show the intended use once without words, then step back again.

Do Montessori activities require expensive materials?

No. The vast majority of Montessori toddler activities use household items: bowls, spoons, tongs, sponges, water, beans, fabric scraps, clothespins, muffin tins, and natural objects. You likely have everything you need already. Specialized Montessori materials are nice but absolutely not necessary.

How do I set up a Montessori activity area at home?

You need: a low shelf the child can reach independently, 4-6 activities arranged on trays or in baskets (each activity self-contained), a child-sized table and chair, and a floor mat for floor work. Keep the area uncluttered, with everything in its place. The child should be able to choose, use, and return activities without your help.

Can I do Montessori activities without a Montessori education?

Absolutely. You do not need training or certification. The core principles are simple: observe your child, prepare the environment, present activities simply, step back and let them work, and follow their interests. Most Montessori toddler activities are based on ordinary life skills that parents naturally understand.

What is the most important Montessori activity for toddlers?

Practical life activities — pouring, sweeping, dressing, food preparation, cleaning. Maria Montessori considered these the foundation of all later learning because they build concentration, coordination, independence, and order. A toddler who can pour their own water has practiced fine motor control, sequencing, and self-reliance simultaneously.

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