Halloween is the perfect time to mix festive fun with developmental support for kids. Whether your child is working on communication, sensory processing, or fine motor skills, these activities combine holiday excitement with therapy-friendly strategies you can do at home.
1. Pumpkin Vocabulary Hunt
Explore different pumpkins and talk about size, color, texture, and shape. Words like “big,” “tiny,” “smooth,” or “bumpy” help build descriptive vocabulary.
2. Pumpkin Scooping Sensory Play
Scooping out pumpkin seeds offers a great sensory experience while building hand strength. Encourage squeezing, pulling, and scooping to support fine motor development.

3. Trick-or-Treat Role Play
Practice social phrases like “trick or treat,” “thank you,” and “happy Halloween”. This helps kids prepare for the big night and encourages real-world communication skills.
4. Spider Web Fine Motor Craft
Use yarn or string to weave a spider web across a paper plate or cardboard. Threading supports hand-eye coordination and bilateral hand use.
5. Halloween Storytelling
Start a story with a Halloween prompt like “On Halloween night, I saw…” and let your child finish it. This activity builds sequencing, creativity, and sentence structure.
6. Candy Sorting & Labeling
After trick-or-treating, sort candy by type or color. Encourage your child to describe categories (“chocolate,” “red,” “round”) to strengthen vocabulary and organization.
7. Costume Dress-Up Practice
Encourage your child to put on and take off costume pieces like zippers, buttons, or masks. This builds independence and fine motor dressing skills.
8. Halloween Obstacle Course
Set up a course with crawling under “spider webs” (streamers), balancing on a “witch’s broom” (pool noodle), or jumping over “pumpkins” (pillows). Obstacle play strengthens gross motor coordination and body awareness.
Bringing It All Together
Blending speech, language, and occupational therapy activities into Halloween traditions makes the holiday both fun and beneficial. At SmallTalk Pediatric Therapy, we encourage families to use play as a natural way to support growth and development. Looking for more ideas? Learn more about our speech and language therapy and occupational therapy services.