Giving children chores can feel almost cruel when they are small and the job would be quicker to do yourself. But age-appropriate chores are one of the kindest things you can give a child: they build responsibility, capability and a sense of being a valued part of the family. Here is what children can realistically help with at each age.
Why chores matter
Research and plain old experience agree that children who help around the house grow up more capable and more confident. Chores teach life skills, show children that a home runs on everyone pitching in, and give them the quiet pride of contributing. The trick is matching the job to the age.
Toddlers (2 to 3)
Little ones love to “help”. Let them put toys in a box, drop clothes in the laundry basket, wipe up a spill with a cloth, and fetch and carry simple things. They will be slow and imperfect, and that is entirely the point.
Ages 4 to 5
Now they can help set and clear the table, feed a pet, water plants, make their bed roughly, and tidy their room with you alongside them.
The Toddler Meltdown Cheat Sheet
The exact words to use when your brain goes blank: calm scripts for tantrums, bedtime, mealtimes and more. Free printable.
Join 2,400+ UK mums on The Mellow Post. No spam, unsubscribe any time.
Ages 6 to 8
School-age children can sort laundry by colour, help load and unload the dishwasher, sweep, pack their own school bag, tidy independently, and do simple food prep like buttering toast or washing veg.
Ages 9 to 11
Older children can take out the bins, hoover, change their bedsheets, walk the dog with you, and make simple meals like a sandwich or scrambled eggs.
Age 12 and up
Teens and tweens can cook a basic family meal, do laundry from start to finish, clean the bathroom, and manage their own school bits and routines.
Making chores work
- Lower your standards and resist redoing their work in front of them, which tells them their effort was not good enough.
- Build chores into the routine so they become a normal part of the day rather than a nagging battle.
- Whether to pay is a personal choice. Many families keep basic helping-out as unpaid and offer pocket money for bigger, optional jobs.
Common questions
Should children be paid for chores?
It is a personal choice. Many families treat basic helping out as an unpaid part of being in the family, and offer pocket money for bigger or optional jobs. Both approaches work.
What chores can a 3 year old do?
Toddlers can put toys away, drop clothes in the laundry basket, wipe up spills with a cloth and fetch simple things. They will be slow and imperfect, which is completely normal.
How do I get kids to do chores without nagging?
Build chores into the daily routine so they become normal and expected, keep your standards realistic, and avoid redoing their work in front of them, which discourages effort.
Join the Conversation
Real talk from real UK mums. Ask questions, share advice, find local groups near you.
Join the Community →


