Days Out

Screen-Free Car Journey Ideas for Long Drives With Kids

22 May 2026 · 3 min read · By Heather
Updated 9 July 2026
Screen-Free Car Journey Ideas for Long Drives With Kids

Long car journeys with children used to mean handing over a tablet and hoping for the best. But screens are not the only way to survive a four-hour drive, and a bit of screen-free fun often means fewer tears, less car sickness and a much nicer arrival. Here are ideas that genuinely keep kids happy on the road.

Classic car games (free and brilliant)

Things to listen to

Audio is a road-trip lifesaver because it entertains without the screen-time downsides or the motion sickness that reading and tablets can trigger. Try audiobooks, children’s story podcasts, a favourite playlist or a good old-fashioned sing-along. Many families find an audiobook the whole car can enjoy turns a dreaded drive into a highlight.

Busy bags and activities

Pack a small bag for each child with a few quiet activities: sticker books, magnetic travel games, reusable colouring pads, window clings and finger puppets all work well. The trick is to dole them out one at a time rather than all at once, so novelty lasts. A little surprise snack box that they open at a certain point on the journey buys you a good half hour too.

Comfort and breaks

Even the best activities will not beat basic comfort. Dress children in layers, bring water and easy snacks, and plan regular stops to run about, especially with toddlers who simply need to move. If car sickness is an issue, keeping eyes on the horizon rather than down at a toy or book, fresh air and not travelling on a very full or empty stomach all help.

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For toddlers especially

Younger children have short attention spans, so rotate little toys often, narrate what you see out of the window, and accept that timing the drive around a nap can be the single best decision you make all trip.

Common questions

How can I prevent car sickness in children?

Encourage them to look out at the horizon rather than down at toys or books, keep the car well aired, take regular breaks, and avoid travelling on a very full or completely empty stomach. Audio activities are gentler than reading or screens.

What car activities work for toddlers?

Toddlers do best with frequent variety: rotate small toys, sing songs, narrate what you can see out of the window, and where possible time the drive around a nap.

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What are good screen-free car games for older kids?

Twenty questions, would you rather, the number plate game, building a silly story together and audiobooks all work well for older children and help pass the time without screens.

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By Heather

Heather is the founder of Darling Mellow and a home-educating mum of two, with CPD training in child development. She writes practical, honest guides for UK home-educating families, each one fact-checked against current law and official GOV.UK guidance. Darling Mellow is the resource she wished she had when she started.

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