Turn Chores Into Play: 3 Game-Based Cleaning Hacks for Kids
If tidy-up time at your house usually ends in groans (yours or theirs), try borrowing the rules from a few games you probably already own. The idea is simple: gamify the cleaning — don’t cleanify the game time.
That distinction matters more than it sounds. Tell your kids up front that you’re cleaning today, just with a twist, rather than luring them in with “let’s play a game!” and switching the rules on them halfway through. Frame it honestly and the fun lands a lot better.
Here are three easy ways to turn a game you already have in the closet into a round of cleanup — no timers required.
1. Go Fish, Chore Edition
Skip asking for “any octopi” and ask for something real instead: “Can you find three dirty socks in your room?” If they find them, they win the card. Then let them turn the tables and ask you to track down something in the house — four stuffed animals in the wrong spot, three cups from the sink, whatever fits.
You can keep it loose and improvised, or go all in: one night after the kids are in bed, cover the fish on each card with a Post-it labeling a specific item or category, so the “ask” is built right into the deck.
This one takes the most creativity on the fly, so it’s a good one to start with — the other two get easier from here.
2. Uno, But Every Color Is a Room
Before you deal the cards, assign each Uno color to a room: red for the bathroom, green for the kitchen, blue for the bedroom, yellow for the playroom (swap in whatever rooms need the help).
Play a normal round — but whoever’s turn is next has to run to that color’s room and tidy a few items before they can lay their card down. Drop a red 3? Off to the bathroom to tidy three things before the next card goes down.
The special cards make it even more fun:
- Skip – that player is off the hook, no cleaning required.
- Reverse – the job passes to the person on the other side.
- Draw Two (or more) – stack up extra items to tidy.
- Wild – call out a room you didn’t originally assign, like the entryway or mudroom.
Fair warning: this one can run long once everyone’s up and moving between rooms — but that’s more steps logged and more getting done, so it’s hard to call that a downside.
3. Candyland, Color by Color
Roll the dice, move your piece, and whatever color you land on sends you off to find one item in that color and put it away. Land on pink? Track down something pink and get it back where it belongs. Land on blue next turn? Same idea.
It’s a little more random than the other two, but it keeps things moving — and stuff keeps landing back where it goes.
The one rule that makes all three work: decide ahead of time that this is cleaning time with a game twist, not game time that sneakily becomes cleaning. Kids can tell the difference, and starting honest is what makes them willing to play along next time too.
None of these have been road-tested yet — they’re fresh ideas born out of a Friday brainstorm. If you try one (or invent your own twist on a favorite game), I’d love to hear how it goes. Find me on Instagram @joylovinghome or drop me a note at joy@joylovinghome.com.
Want more organizing ideas like this all summer long? I’m running a six-week Summertime Sampler — $10 gets you access June through August to dip in and out of different organizing projects and challenges in a small, low-pressure Facebook group. Get the details here.

Be the first to comment