Indoor Gross Motor Activities for Toddlers: 25 Ways to Burn Energy Inside

Indoor Gross Motor Activities for Toddlers: 25 Ways to Burn Energy Inside

Rainy days, winter weather, scorching summers, or sick siblings keeping you homebound—every parent knows the challenge of a toddler with energy to burn and nowhere to run. These indoor gross motor activities will help your little one move, jump, climb, and play without destroying your house or your sanity.

Why Gross Motor Activities Matter

Gross motor skills involve the large muscles of the body—legs, arms, and core. These skills develop rapidly during toddlerhood and form the foundation for:

Physical development. Running, jumping, climbing, and balancing build strength, coordination, and body awareness that children need for everything from sports to writing.

Cognitive development. Movement activates the brain. Physical activity actually improves focus, memory, and learning capacity.

Emotional regulation. Toddlers who move enough are calmer, sleep better, and have fewer meltdowns. Movement releases pent-up energy and stress.

Sleep quality. Well-exercised toddlers fall asleep faster and sleep more soundly. If your toddler fights bedtime, insufficient physical activity during the day might be the culprit.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends toddlers get at least 60 minutes of active play daily. When outdoor play isn’t possible, you need indoor alternatives.

Setting Up for Success

Before diving into activities, prepare your space:

Clear the area. Move furniture to create open floor space. Remove breakables from low surfaces.

Use soft landing zones. Place pillows, cushions, or area rugs where falling might happen.

Dress appropriately. Bare feet often provide better traction than socks. Remove bulky clothing that restricts movement.

Set boundaries. Designate which rooms are for active play and which are off-limits. Consistency helps toddlers understand expectations.

Classic Games That Never Fail

The Floor Is Lava

Rearrange couch cushions, pillows, and small rugs around the room. When you shout “The floor is lava!” your toddler has five seconds to get onto a “safe” surface.

Skills developed: Jumping, quick movement, balance, listening

Variations:

  • Add a path they must follow
  • Include animal movements between safe zones (hop like a frog, stomp like an elephant)
  • Time how long they can stay off the floor

Simon Says

This classic works beautifully for gross motor development. Focus commands on big movements:

  • “Simon says jump three times”
  • “Simon says touch your toes”
  • “Simon says run in place”
  • “Simon says spin around”
  • “Simon says march like a soldier”

Skills developed: Listening, body awareness, following directions, various movements

Freeze Dance

Play music and dance together. When the music stops, everyone freezes. Toddlers love both the dancing and the silly frozen poses.

Skills developed: Body control, rhythm, stopping on command, balance

For more music-based activities, check out our music and movement activities guide.

Obstacle Courses

Obstacle courses are gold for gross motor development and can be built from household items.

Basic Living Room Course

Set up stations around the room:

  1. 1. Crawl under – A blanket draped over two chairs
  2. 2. Step over – A pool noodle laid across two objects
  3. 3. Jump on – Couch cushions on the floor
  4. 4. Balance beam – Tape line on the floor
  5. 5. Throw into – Laundry basket for bean bags or rolled socks

Tips:

  • Walk through the course first to demonstrate
  • Start simple with three to four stations
  • Add stations as your toddler masters the basics
  • Let them help set up—ownership increases engagement

Hallway Courses

Hallways make natural obstacle courses:

  • Tape zigzag lines to follow
  • Place stuffed animals to step over
  • Add a “tunnel” (blanket over chairs) at one end
  • End with a target to hit with a ball

Jumping Activities

Toddlers naturally love to jump, and it’s excellent for leg strength and coordination.

Pillow Jumping

Scatter couch cushions or large pillows on the floor. Challenge your toddler to jump from one to another without touching the floor.

Safety note: Ensure pillows won’t slide on hard floors. Place on carpet or use non-slip rug pads underneath.

Bubble Wrap Stomp

Tape a large sheet of bubble wrap to the floor. Let your toddler jump and stomp to pop the bubbles. The sensory feedback is incredibly satisfying.

Jump the River

Lay two pieces of tape parallel on the floor (the “river”). Start narrow and gradually widen as your toddler’s jumping improves. Can they jump across without “falling in”?

Mattress Jumping

Pull a mattress onto the floor for safe jumping practice. Many toddlers jump on beds anyway—this makes it sanctioned and safer.

Balance Activities

Balance develops gradually through toddlerhood and requires practice.

Tape Lines

Use painter’s tape to create lines on the floor:

  • Straight lines to walk along
  • Zigzag patterns
  • Curved paths
  • Shapes to walk around

Challenge your toddler to walk the lines without stepping off. Add difficulty by having them carry an object while walking.

Stepping Stones

Tape paper plates, felt circles, or foam pieces to the floor as stepping stones. Space them appropriately for your toddler’s stride. They must step only on the stones to cross the “water.”

One-Foot Balance

Practice standing on one foot while holding your hand. Count how long they can balance. Make it fun with animal themes—stand like a flamingo!

Balance Beam Practice

Use painter’s tape (free), a plank of wood (low to ground), or pool noodles arranged in lines for balance practice.

Climbing and Crawling

These fundamental movements build core strength and body awareness.

Couch Mountain

Arrange couch cushions into a “mountain” for climbing. Add pillows around the base for safe landing.

Tunnel Crawling

Create tunnels with:

  • Cardboard boxes (ends cut out)
  • Blankets draped over chairs
  • Play tunnels (affordable on Amazon)

Set up multiple tunnels for longer crawling courses.

Under and Over Course

Alternate obstacles to crawl under (chairs with blankets, tables) and step over (pool noodles, pillows). This combination is great for body awareness.

For more fine motor activities to complement gross motor play, see our fine motor activities guide.

Throwing and Catching

These skills require practice and improve hand-eye coordination.

Indoor Bowling

Set up empty plastic bottles or cardboard boxes. Roll a soft ball to knock them down. Count pins together for early math practice.

Target Practice

Hang a hula hoop from a doorway. Practice throwing soft balls, bean bags, or rolled socks through the hoop. Adjust height for difficulty.

Laundry Basket Ball

Place a laundry basket a few feet away. Toss rolled socks or soft balls into it. Move the basket farther as accuracy improves.

Balloon Volleyball

Blow up a balloon and practice keeping it in the air. Balloons move slowly, making them perfect for toddler hand-eye coordination. Set up a string “net” across a hallway for a volleyball game.

Animal Movement Games

Kids love pretending to be animals, and different animals require different movements.

Animal Action Cards

Make simple cards with animal pictures. Draw a card and move like that animal across the room:

  • Frog: Jump
  • Bear: Walk on hands and feet
  • Crab: Sideways walking on hands and feet
  • Snake: Slither on belly
  • Kangaroo: Hop with hands in front
  • Bird: Run with arms flapping
  • Elephant: Stomp heavily

Animal Parade

Put on music and have an animal parade around the house. Call out animals and everyone moves accordingly.

Sensory Movement Activities

Combining movement with sensory input enhances engagement and development.

Dance Scarves

Light scarves or ribbons make movement more interesting. Wave them while dancing, throw them up and catch them, or make shapes in the air.

Ball Pit Alternative

Fill a small kiddie pool with plastic balls (or balloons) and let your toddler climb in and out. The climbing plus the sensory input provides excellent gross motor work.

Proprioceptive Input Activities

Heavy work calms many toddlers while building strength:

  • Push laundry basket across the room
  • Carry grocery bags (put pillows inside for weight)
  • Pull a wagon with stuffed animals
  • “Help” move furniture (hold one end of a small chair)

For more sensory-rich activities, check out our sensory bin ideas.

Yoga for Toddlers

Simple yoga poses build strength, flexibility, and body awareness.

Easy poses for toddlers:

  • Tree pose: Stand on one foot with hands together
  • Downward dog: Hands and feet on floor, bottom up
  • Cat/cow: On hands and knees, arching and rounding back
  • Butterfly: Sitting with soles of feet together, gently flapping knees
  • Star: Standing with arms and legs spread wide

Use animal names for poses to increase engagement (downward dog becomes “puppy pose”).

Low-Energy Alternatives

For times when you can’t handle high-energy play but your toddler still needs movement:

Stretching Routine

Lead a simple stretching routine—reach for the sky, touch toes, twist side to side. Calming but still involves gross motor movement.

Balloon Bop

Gently bop a balloon back and forth while sitting. Less chaotic than standing balloon play but still involves arm movement.

Seated Dancing

Put on music and dance while sitting—move arms, twist torso, stomp feet. Good for when you need to contain the chaos.

Making It Routine

Morning energy burst. Start the day with ten minutes of active play to help your toddler focus.

After lunch movement. A short active session before quiet time or nap helps with transitions.

Pre-dinner energy release. The witching hour goes better when toddlers have moved.

Rainy day rotation. Keep a list of activities and rotate through them on homebound days.

Safety Considerations

  • Clear sharp corners and hard edges from play areas
  • Remove choking hazards from spaces where toddlers will be on the floor
  • Ensure adult supervision for climbing activities
  • Use soft balls and objects for throwing games indoors
  • Check that rugs and cushions won’t slip on hard floors

When Outdoor Play Isn’t Possible

These activities won’t fully replace outdoor play—nothing matches fresh air and open space. But they can:

  • Burn enough energy to prevent meltdowns
  • Support continued gross motor development
  • Provide fun and connection on stuck-inside days
  • Maintain movement habits when weather won’t cooperate

The goal isn’t perfection. Twenty minutes of indoor gross motor activity won’t substitute for an hour at the playground. But it’s far better than a screen-filled day with a frustrated, under-exercised toddler.

Keep this list handy for those inevitable days when going outside isn’t an option. Your toddler’s need to move won’t wait for perfect weather.

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