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12 Best Subscription Boxes for Kids (2022): All Ages, STEM, Books, and Snacks |...

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Oct 30, 2022 10:00 AM

The 12 Best Subscription Boxes for Kids

These monthly deliveries will help children start coding or cooking, and encourage them to read about the world or learn science.

Here is a proposition: Rather than delight your kid once or twice a year with a big, expensive present that will eventually get put aside, why not surprise them with a small, delightful package once a month? I have two kids, a 5-year-old and a 7-year-old, and they love it when something arrives in the mail that aren’t bills, replacement chargers from Amazon, or Garnet Hill catalogs. 

A more or less ongoing supply chain crisis may still make traditional holiday shopping challenging (or expensive). Subscription boxes can be useful supplements for remote learning and come in handy if you can’t send your sniffly kid back to daycare or to a big indoor birthday party. As a bonus, they’re usually affordable! I tested some of the subscriptions on this list, and I bought others for my kids and their friends. These became our favorites. 

Be sure to check out all of our other buying guides for kids, including the Best STEM toys, Best Kids’ Headphones, Best Tablets for Kids, and Best Tech Gifts for Kids.

Updated October 2022: We’ve added new items, like the Keke Bag and Lovevery. 

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  • crate full of crafts
    Photograph: KiwiCo

    The Best Box

    KiwiCo Kiwi Crate

    For years, my parents have sent a monthly Kiwi Crate to my children. My 5-year-old son now receives some of the same themed crates my 7-year-old received at his age. Kiwi Crate offers a staggering array of gift boxes for all ages, from toddlers under 2 to teenagers. You can also choose boxes aimed at specific interests, such as music, mazes, holiday crafts, and robots.

    The sheer amount of stuff in most gift subscription boxes can be overwhelming, especially for smaller children. That's why I particularly like Kiwi's careful curation, with projects that are age-appropriate, but won't break my kids' hearts if they lose or destroy them, like sewing together a baseball mitt made out of felt. Each box also includes clear instructions that require little parental supervision—my kids can follow the drawings, even if they have trouble parsing the written instructions. My shark-obsessed son loved a recent marine biologist box with a clay-moldable coral reef. 

  • Photograph: Lovevery

    Best for Really Young Kids

    Lovevery Play Kit

    We received a (spendy!) Lovevery kit when my son was 2 years old. Now he’s 5, and I still find the company’s sturdy, Montessori-inspired toys in use around our house. Lovevery (pronounced “love-every”) promotes what it calls stage-based learning. At each stage of development, a baby needs different (beautiful, colorful, durable) toys to help them develop different parts of their brain.

    It’s pretty cute to term every stage with a different focus, like The Inspector or The Explorer, although I have to admit that I’m not so sure my son enjoyed experimenting with gravity that much more at 10 months than at a year old (he still dropped things on the floor is what I’m saying). My much older daughter also enjoyed arranging giant, gorgeous felt flowers just as much as my son did. If you’re a special person in a little one’s life and want to send them toys that are attractive and sturdy enough to pass down to others, this is the best toy subscription to get. 

  • Photograph: We Craft Box 

    Best Craft Box

    We Craft Craft Box

    Crafting is the most torturous part of parenting for me. It encourages creativity and fine motor skills, and my kids can be entertained by glitter, tiny pipe cleaners, and crayons for hours. But purchasing and storing supplies and cleaning up after their messes is a nightmare.

    A We Craft subscription box solves all of those problems by organizing crafts around small monthly themes to simplify containment and maintenance. These are not as STEM-oriented as some of our other picks, but they offer a tremendous amount of variety for an affordable price. Need more craft ideas for younger kids? Here are some tips for how to entertain your young children at home.

    Featured Video

  • Photograph: Literati

    Best Book Club 

    Literati Book Club

    We paid for a Literati subscription until its curation system worked against them. Literati offers book clubs that take newborn children all the way up to their teens, and it even features an adult book club. Literati will send your child five books each month. Return any books that you don't like and pay Amazon's list price for the rest. Every single book was a hit, and each kid had to have every book in every box. For the sake of my wallet and our already-groaning bookshelves, I had to stop the subscription.  

    You can gift a subscription or a one-time, age-appropriate theme box that comes with a card and personalized stickers and artwork. It's a great way to expose your children (and yourself!) to wonderful new works of art or literature without having to drag them to a bookstore. 

  • Photograph: Universal Yums

    Best Snack Box

    Universal Yums Snack Box

    Every month, my kids tear into the Universal Yums snack box like a very small pack of very tiny wolves. My colleague Louryn Strampe recommends it in her Best Snack Boxes guide, and you can choose a small, medium, or large box, and it includes an informative booklet, games, and trivia. 

    Food is a great way to learn about geography and different cultures. Every month, my kids and I open the box, look at a globe, and do a lot of Googling. We have liked several foreign candies enough to start ordering them separately on Amazon. Even when the snacks aren't a hit—I got the salted truffle French fries all to myself—my kids always try them and ask a lot of questions about why a country is called the Kingdom of Butterflies and when we can visit.

  • Photograph: Bitsbox

    Best for Budding Coders

    Bitsbox Basic Box

    Just as parents used to give their children tiny kitchen sets and toy hammers, now we've got coding kits. Even if kids don't grow up to become professional software engineers, basic programming fluency will undoubtedly come in handy. The Bitsbox is aimed at children who can already read and write. Following the instructions in the booklet, your child can create a simple app to use on any computer, tablet, or smartphone with a web browser (although younger children will probably require a lot of supervision). 

  • Photograph: Little Passports

    Best Science Box

    Little Passports Science Expeditions

    Little Passports caters to a variety of ages and interests, with an Early Explorers box aimed at children as young as 3. The activities for younger users are adorable and engaging, and the science boxes for older kids offer creative introductions to a wide variety of subjects. I tested the introductory kit, which was on forensic science. I don't recall having learned anything about forensic science, even in high school, and I had never extracted the DNA from a squashed strawberry before. It was fascinating. 

    ★ Alternative: I also very much enjoyed the Steve Spangler Science Club box ($33), which features classic hands-on projects. You might think you could put together a simple marshmallow masher yourself. But do you have time to look for old soda bottles? No.

  • Photograph: Little Feminist

    Best for Feminists

    Little Feminist Book Club

    Kids aren’t naturally empathetic. Entertaining books that feature a diverse cast of characters are one of the best ways to show them what life is like for families that are interracial or LGBTQ+. Little Feminist is expressly anti-racist, body-positive, trans- and gender-inclusive, and against ableism and classism. Memberships start at $5 per month, are age-appropriate, and each package includes a book (or two, if they’re small) along with an activity, discussion card, and family letter to explain why the company picked this book.

    What I like best about the selections Little Feminist sent us is that the books aren’t didactic. Rather than lecturing children on racism or inequality, they simply show diverse families and kids doing … well, the exact same things that cisgender, white, heterosexual families also do. Mama and Mommy and Me in the Middle showed a queer interracial family where a parent went on a work trip, just like my spouse happened to be doing when we read it. It never even occurred to my children to comment that this family might have looked different than ours, which is the way it should be. 

  • Photograph: Raddish Kids

    Best for Cooking

    Raddish Cooking Club

    Last year, we recommended America's Test Kitchen's Preschool Chef's Club. While you can still buy individual boxes, there's no longer a monthly subscription. That's where the Raddish Kids' Cooking Club comes in. I still send these boxes as gifts to friends and cousins with preschool-aged children. My kids and I still regularly use the company's tiny utensils (and have replaced them several times). The recipes are simple, well-illustrated, and appealing—no weird science experiments here, just kid-friendly recipes for apple pie and meatballs. They've resulted in many warm memories of making pretzels on the back deck with my family. Don't forget to check out the seasonal boxes as well, including a few for Thanksgiving

  • Photograph: Keke

    Best for Travel

    Keke Pouch

    Kids are small factories of chaos. The constant stream of worksheets, drawings, and crafts is great for encouraging creativity and hand-eye coordination, but every surface in our house is perpetually cluttered. Rather than contributing to the mess, the Keke (Keep Every Kid Engaged) bag keeps every item organized. This frankly adorable, durable, handled bag has four activities in separate pouches that clip into binder rings, and extra storage pockets for masks or hand sanitizer. Every 12 weeks, the Keke subscription sends three new activities in new pouches to swap out. (You need to buy the bag separately.)

    Even though the activities are aimed at 3-to-6-year-olds (and some, like a simple puzzle, are too easy even for my 5-year-old), I’m considering buying a Keke bag for my 7-year-old just for holiday travel. I’ve been experimenting with different travel organizers to hold all her markers, stickers, and card games for travel and the Keke Bag is the best I’ve seen yet. 

  • Photograph: Rockets of Awesome

    Best Kids' Clothing Subscription

    Rockets of Awesome Clothes Subscription

    You don't have to buy new children's clothes. They're either incredibly expensive and your kid outgrows them in two months or they're cheaply made, instantly and forever beloved, and will vaporize after three washes. When my kids were going through 3-4 onesies per diem, I sourced ours through hand-me-downs, Goodwill, resale sites, and neighborhood Buy Nothing groups. But due to extreme WFH mom fatigue and my son's still budding fashion sense, I just realized that my children are still scampering through 40-degree rain in shorts. 

    If this sounds familiar, you might benefit from a seasonal clothing subscription. Rockets of Awesome is the Stitch Fix for children. The company painstakingly quizzes you on your child's preferences before sending a box for $20. You can buy any clothes you decide to keep for an up to 40 percent discount. And when your kid outgrows them, you can get credits by returning used clothing. The fuzzy pants were a hit with my 4-year-old; the jacket, less so. But this one is fun for kids and useful for you.

  • Photograph: The Week Junior

    A Great Kids' Magazine Subscription

    The Week Junior

    This has been a pretty news-heavy few years. Other parents may disagree with me, but my kids really want to know what's going on in the world around us—in a safe, understandable, kid-friendly way, of course. The Week Junior is aimed at 8- to 14-year-olds, but my 7-year-old can now parse it out herself. Every week, we cuddle on the couch while they look at pictures and pick out which current events to read about, like the Olympics, or whether apps should have likes. It's a great way to keep my kids informed without worrying that they'll hear swear words in my podcasts.  


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