Child Benefit and the High-Income Charge Explained (2026)
Quick answer Child Benefit in 2026 to 2027 is £27.05 a week for your eldest child...

We love the idea of autumn crafts until we realise who is holding the glue gun. Too many projects online look gorgeous but secretly rely on mum to cut, stick, and stage. Here are ten autumn crafts that kids in the UK can really do themselves in 2026. Messy, simple, and joyfully imperfect — the way crafts should be.
Autumn crafts work best when children can own the process. Imperfect equals success.
Collect leaves from the garden or park. Place them under plain paper and rub over with crayons or pencils. Kids see the veins and shapes appear like magic. No scissors, no glue, no help needed.
Grab a sheet of card and let kids glue on whatever they collect outside — leaves, twigs, seeds. The rule: no correcting their layout. The fun is in the random designs. Provide glue sticks and let them take charge.
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Give kids a pinecone, peanut butter, and bird seed. They roll the cone in peanut butter then dip into the seed. Tie with string and hang outside. It is quick, satisfying, and they can spot birds later.
Make a simple checklist with colour boxes — red, yellow, orange, brown. Send kids to collect leaves or objects that match. Stick them onto card for a living colour chart. No adult input needed once the chart is drawn.
Conkers are everywhere in September. Hand kids paint or markers and let them decorate. Stripes, spots, faces — anything goes. Dry them on newspaper. Zero parental input required beyond opening the paint.
Children find a stick, wrap wool or ribbon around it, and call it a wand. Optional extras: glue on a leaf or feather. The simplicity is the point. They decide what makes it magical.
Give kids a paper plate with a hole in the centre. They thread string through and tie on leaves, pinecones, or cut-out paper shapes. Imperfect balance makes it even prettier. Hang by the window and let them claim the credit.
Cut apples in half. Children dip the flat side in paint and stamp onto paper. They can make patterns, trees, or random blobs. Provide wipes and let them go. Works with potatoes too if you have extras.
Save clean jars. Kids stick on tissue paper with watered-down PVA glue. Add a tea light or LED candle when dry. The glow feels magical, and the process is fully child-friendly.
Cut a strip of card to fit a child’s head. They tape or glue on leaves, feathers, or paper cut-outs. Staple or tape the ends together. Done. No sewing, no perfection, just fun dress-up.
Children learn more when they own the process. Messy crafts teach problem solving and creativity better than parent-polished projects. The Cubby is about small wins and little joys, not Instagram trophies. Let go of the perfect photo. Hold onto the laughter instead.
If your child tried one of these crafts, post a photo in The Cubby. It does not have to be pretty. The best part is seeing what children create when mums step back. That is the win worth sharing.

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