Funny questions to ask kids are one of the quickest ways to get real conversation, because laughter lowers the stakes and opens the door to honesty. These are good questions when you want connection without turning into an investigator with a clipboard. They are also great questions to ask when you need something that works for fun, but still helps you learn what is going on in their little world.
Most importantly, the right question helps a child feel safe being themselves, which is why the answers tend to surprise you. As a result, you often hear more than you would from a dozen “How was school?” attempts. These prompts work beautifully at dinner, in the car, at bedtime, or in those waiting-room minutes that feel like a full-time job. And if you parent kindergarteners or other little kids, you will appreciate how easy it is to pull one out and watch the mood improve.
7 Questions to Ask Your Kids
These questions can be asked every single day to get things started! Creating a routine like this makes it a lot easier for kids to open up regularly.
- What was the weirdest thing that happened today?
- If today had a title, what would it be?
- What made you laugh (even a little)?
- What was the hardest part of today – and what helped?
- If you could redo one moment today, what would you change?
- What’s something you’re proud of from today?
- What should we ask each other tomorrow?
Conversation Starters
Conversation starters are the fastest way to get them talking, because they begin light and invite storytelling. Use these when you want to ask a kid something simple that still leads somewhere.
- If your day had a theme song, what would it be?
- What was the funniest thing you saw today (even if it was tiny)?
- If you could rename today, what would you call it?
- What do you think clouds are doing up there all day?
- If your shoes could talk, what would they complain about?
- If your backpack had a secret, what would it be?
- If you could stop time for 10 minutes, what would you do?
- What’s something you wish grown-ups understood about kids?
- If today had a smell, what would it smell like?
- What’s one thing you noticed today that other people probably didn’t?
All About You Questions for Kids
“All about you” questions are a sweet shortcut to get to know them, because kids reveal personality faster than they reveal facts. These also work well when you want the child to feel seen, not studied.
- If you had a superhero name, what would it be?
- What’s your “special talent” that nobody appreciates enough?
- If you had a warning label, what would it say?
- If you were a snack, what snack would you be?
- What would your personal flag look like?
- If your laugh had a sound effect, what would it be?
- If you could swap voices with someone for a day, whose would you pick?
- What’s the most “you” thing you’ve ever done?
- If you were in charge of your own country, what would you be famous for?
- What nickname would you give yourself that you totally deserve?
Feelings and Emotions
Feelings questions matter because kids have big emotions and sometimes tiny vocabulary. Therefore, these prompts keep it deep in a gentle way, without turning the moment into a therapy appointment.
- If your mood was a color today, what color would it be?
- If your feelings were weather, what’s the forecast?
- What’s something tiny that makes you instantly happy?
- What makes you feel brave – like “I could fight a dragon” brave?
- If worry was a creature, what would it look like?
- What does “calm” feel like in your body?
- If your anger had a name, what would it be?
- What’s your “I need space” signal?
- What’s the funniest thing that ever cheered you up?
- What’s something that makes you feel loved immediately?
Favorite Things
Favorites are easy to answer, which makes them perfect when energy is low and patience is lower. However, they often turn interesting once you ask for a follow-up like “Tell me more.”
- What’s your favorite sound in the whole world?
- What’s your favorite thing to do when nobody tells you what to do?
- What’s your favorite word to say out loud?
- What’s your favorite smell – and your least favorite?
- What’s your favorite time of day and why?
- What’s your favorite outfit that makes you feel awesome?
- What’s your favorite silly face to make?
- What’s your favorite rule you wish existed?
- What’s your favorite place to relax (even if it’s weird)?
- What’s your favorite “made-up” food combo?
School
These are questions about school that dodge the classic “fine” response and replace it with details. As a result, you learn what happened without needing a full debriefing session.
- If your teacher turned into an animal, which animal would it be?
- What’s the funniest rule at school?
- If your class had a mascot, what should it be?
- What subject would be better if it had trampolines?
- If recess had a soundtrack, what would it sound like?
- What’s the weirdest lunch you’ve ever seen someone bring?
- If you were principal for a day, what’s the first thing you’d change?
- What would your school be like if kids made all the rules?
- What’s something at school that feels totally unnecessary?
- If your homework could talk, what would it say to you?
Food & Drink
Food questions are reliable to make them laugh, because children have strong opinions and very little filter about snacks. So if you want a low-effort win at dinner, start here.
- If you invented a new ice cream flavor, what would it be called?
- What food do you think is pretending to taste good?
- If broccoli had feelings, what would it say about kids?
- What’s the most suspicious food on your plate?
- If you could only eat one color of food for a day, what color would you pick?
- What’s the weirdest food combination that might actually be amazing?
- If your drink could have superpowers, what would it do?
- What food would make the best hat?
- If pizza could talk, what advice would it give?
- If you were a chef, what would your restaurant be named?
Friends and Family
Friends and family questions help kids describe relationships in their own language, which is often both honest and hilarious. These are also good for those moments when you want connection, but you do not want to force it.
- What is something your family does that would seem weird to another family?
- If your family had a team name, what would it be?
- If your friend were a mythical creature, what would they be?
- Who in your family would survive longest in the wilderness – and why?
- What’s the funniest thing someone in your family always says?
- If you could swap chores with someone, who would you pick?
- What’s something your friend does that makes you laugh every time?
- Who is the silliest in your family when nobody’s watching?
- If your family had a secret handshake, what would it include?
- What’s a rule you would make for siblings (or parents)?
Home and Living
Home questions work because kids notice household “logic” the way comedians do. Meanwhile, you get a peek into what they think matters day to day.
- If your house could talk, what would it complain about?
- What room in the house has the most “mystery energy”?
- If your bed had a personality, what would it be like?
- What’s the weirdest noise your house makes at night?
- If you could add a secret passage anywhere, where would it go?
- What household object would make the best pet?
- If your fridge had a name, what would it be?
- If you were in charge of decorating, what would be different?
- What’s the funniest household rule you could invent?
- What do you think happens to lost socks?
Vacation
Vacation questions make planning feel like play, which buys you cooperation in advance. Plus, the answers are often wonderfully random.
- If you could go anywhere right now, where would you teleport?
- What would your dream hotel have besides beds?
- If your suitcase could pack itself, what would it sneak in?
- Would you rather vacation in space, underwater, or inside a volcano (safely)?
- What’s the funniest souvenir you could bring home?
- If you could invent a new vacation, what would it be?
- What snack would you bring on an epic journey?
- If the car could talk on a road trip, what would it say?
- What’s the best vacation job (roller coaster tester, etc.)?
- What’s something you’d do on vacation that you’d never do at home?
Holidays
Holiday questions are great because kids love tradition, but they love improving tradition even more. Consequently, you get both laughter and a few surprisingly practical ideas.
- If you invented a holiday, what would people do on it?
- What holiday food do you think is overrated?
- If holidays had mascots, what should yours be?
- What’s the weirdest holiday decoration you can imagine?
- If you could add one rule to your favorite holiday, what would it be?
- If you could replace gift-giving with something else, what would it be?
- What holiday should include mandatory pajamas all day?
- If candy had to be earned by a silly challenge, what challenge?
- What’s the funniest thing that ever happened during a holiday?
- If you could celebrate your birthday for three days, what would each day be?
Entertainment and Stories
These prompts are ideal when you want to hear how your child thinks, not just what they did. They can also be a gentle bridge into quieter conversation.
- If you could jump into a book or movie, which one would you pick?
- What character would be the worst babysitter?
- If you wrote a story, what would the first sentence be?
- If your life had a narrator, what would they say today?
- What villain is secretly just misunderstood?
- What’s a movie that would be funnier with a talking toaster?
- If you could change one ending, what would you change?
- What character would make the best teacher?
- If your favorite character met you, what would they say?
- What’s the silliest plot twist you can think of?
Animals and Pets
Animal questions are a dependable way to reset the mood, especially after a long day. And for kids, this category is basically an invitation to be delightfully dramatic.
- If animals could talk, which one would be the rudest?
- What animal looks like it’s always up to something?
- If you had a pet dinosaur, what would you name it?
- What animal would make the best president?
- Would you rather have a pet that can fly or a pet that can turn invisible?
- If you could be any animal for a day, what would you do first?
- What animal would be the funniest roommate?
- If cats wrote the news, what would the top headline be?
- What animal would be the best at telling jokes?
- What’s an animal you think is secretly magical?
The Future and Growing Up
Future questions give kids permission to imagine themselves bigger, braver, and weirder in the best way. Then, you often get little glimpses of what they worry about, too.
- What do you think you’ll be amazing at when you’re older?
- What do you hope never changes about you?
- What job do you think should pay a million dollars?
- What do you think adults do when kids aren’t looking?
- What would your future house definitely have?
- If you could invent a future gadget, what would it do?
- What do you think will be the coolest part of being grown up?
- What do you think will be the worst part?
- If you could tell your future self one thing, what would it be?
- What do you think school will be like in 50 years?
Magic and Sci-Fi
This section is for the days when reality feels like enough, and you want a little magic on purpose. It is also perfect for bedtime, when logic is tired anyway.
- If you had a magic wand, what’s the first spell you’d cast?
- If you could have one superpower with a silly side effect, what’s the deal?
- If your toys came alive at night, what do they do?
- If you could open a portal anywhere, where would it lead?
- If you had a pet dragon, what would it eat?
- If you could shrink to the size of a bug, where would you explore?
- If aliens visited, what snack would you offer them?
- If you built a robot helper, what would it do—and what would it mess up?
- If you could ride any mythical creature to school, what would you pick?
- If you could make one thing in the world float, what would it be?
Silly and Creative
These are the silly ones you use when the energy is wiggly and everyone needs a laugh. They are also excellent for fun when you want to lighten the room fast.
- Would you rather have spaghetti hair or marshmallow feet?
- If you could only speak in animal sounds for a day, which animal would you choose?
- If your sneeze caused a random sound effect, what should it be?
- If you had to wear one costume forever, what would it be?
- If you could replace rain with something else, what would fall from the sky?
- What would be the funniest thing to name a banana?
- If you were a mad scientist, what would you invent first?
- What’s the silliest thing you could put on a pizza that might be… good?
- If you could make one object talk, which one would spill the best secrets?
- What would your evil twin be obsessed with?
- If you had a pet rock, what would its personality be?
- What’s the worst thing to say in a library?
Tips to Make This Tactic Work
Start with Easy Wins
Lead with fun or imagination questions first. Once they’re warmed up, you can slide into the more thoughtful ones naturally.
Talk Like a Human
Ask one question, let them react, and follow up. Kids will keep going if you look genuinely entertained (or mildly shocked, both work).
Stop Asking Why
Instead of “Why did you do that?” try:
- “What made you think of that?”
- “Tell me the story of that.”
- “What happened right before that?”
Offer Choices
If they freeze, give two goofy options:
- “Was today more like a puppy day or a raccoon day?”
- “Did your brain feel fast or mushy?”
Match the Moment
- At dinner: food, highs/lows, “funniest moment,” family questions
- Bedtime: stories, magic, feelings with weather/colors
- Car rides: would-you-rather, random, silly hypotheticals
- After a tough day: start light, then ask one gentle feelings question
Let Them Turn the Tables
If you want them to open up, answer one of your own questions first. Kids love flipping the script – and it models the kind of answer you’re hoping for.
The best funny questions to ask kids do more than fill time, because they create connection in minutes. They also help you hear your child’s real thoughts, which are often hilarious, sharp, and surprisingly wise. So keep a few favorites in your back pocket, and use them whenever you need a reset. You are not “just talking,” even when it looks like silliness. You are building the relationship.
Before You Go…
Keep the conversation going by checking out our Would You Rather questions for kids – with free printables!