11 Road Trip Games To Keep the Whole Family Entertained

Summer Road Trip. Happy Black Family Of Three Riding Car And Singing Having Fun Traveling By Automobile. Parents And Daughter Enjoying Auto Ride Together On Weekend. Panorama, Selective Focus
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Are you dreading a family road trip because you think boredom will lead to complaints the whole time? Before the era of tablets and podcasts, road trippers had to find other ways to stay entertained in the car. These classic road trip games will take you back to your childhood and help make the time go faster — and keep the kids from tapping your shoulder every two minutes to ask if you're "there yet." What do you do to keep road trips fun for everyone? Tell us in the comments.


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Curious child exploring world. Portrait of inquisitive nosy little curly boy looking through fingers shaped like binoculars and expressing amazement. indoor studio shot isolated on blue background
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Sharpen kids' perception skills. The game works by having one person spot something (it can be anything: an object they see outside, or a person in the car) and having the other players guess what that thing is. Once you've thought of your item, say: "I spy with my little eye" and answer players' questions — such as about color or size — to help them decipher what the object is. They can ask only "yes" or "no" questions.


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Young siblings playing in packed car on a road trip during Summer vacations.
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You have 20 questions to figure out what thing somebody else in the car is thinking about. Start broad and narrow the options as you get more clues: Is it an animal, vegetable, or a person? What color is it?

Summer USA road trip license plate 2021 design.
filo/istockphoto

Memorize or write down the letters of the first license plate you spot, then form as many words as you can. Apart from the letters on each player's individual plate, two vowels are picked (they can be unique or the same) that all players can use to add to their pool of letters. The player with the most words at the end of each round wins.

Two friends ride in a crowdsourced taxi, having requested a pick up and drop off on a smartphone.  Shot in Los Angeles, California.
RyanJLane/istockphoto

Great for old and new friends, or to gauge how well your family knows you. The game works by having one player make three statements, with one being untruthful — and the other players have to guess which. You can get creative by mixing true statements with a little fiction, such as retelling a story in which you went on a real trip somewhere but changing the details of who you went with.

Education of Child
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Fun for all ages, as long as everyone has the alphabet memorized. Play by finding items to match all 26 letters of the alphabet in order from A to Z. Get creative by using billboards, roadwork signs, license plates, landmarks, and monuments — anything goes! Once you see the next letter, call it out and keep it going.

Three kids enjoying road trip in family car. Kids are aged 11 and 14. Kids wearing hats and sunglasses are playing games.Nikon D850
Imgorthand/istockphoto

A test of creativity and memorization skills for more crowded cars as each person says their name and an animal that starts with the same letter. (For example: Jake the jaguar.) The next person says all the names before theirs, in order, and adds their own. If they mess up, the game starts all over. Repeat until you get tired.

The whole family is driving for the weekend. Mom and Dad with their daughter and a Labrador dog are sitting in the car. Leisure, travel, tourism.
Valerii Apetroaiei/istockphoto

The possibilities are endless with this progressive story game. One person begins telling a story and each player adds a sentence — but must start that sentence with "fortunately" or "unfortunately," and alternate. So: “John went to the supermarket to buy a drink. Unfortunately it was closed. Fortunately he found a vending machine nearby. Unfortunately it didn’t take dollar bills.”

Friends, Happy, Guitar, Singing, Outdoors
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Fun for musically inclined groups. Each player hums the tune of a song for 10 seconds; the others have to guess what it is. Bonus points for those who can guess it in five seconds or less.

Cheerful family enjoying in car during road trip.
HappyKids/istockphoto

One person starts telling a story; the next person has to continue the story by using the last letter from that first sentence. For example, if “Lori went to school on Monday and met up with her friend Maria,” the next person has to continue the story with the letter "a": “An eagle suddenly flew across the room, and Maria was startled and started to cry.” The first person to get stumped loses.

Travel makes the best memories
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This guessing game will help sharpen history knowledge. Players ask "yes" or "no" questions to guess the identity of a famous person. For example: Is it a woman? No. Was he ever president? Yes. Was he a general? Yes. Did he live in Virginia? Yes. Is he George Washington? Yes.

paper game, hangman
Muhammet Emin Oyar/istockphoto

Great for polishing spelling skills. One player draws a gallows and thinks of a word for the guesser, who can ask one letter at a time. Wrong guesses get a new stick figure body part drawn into the gallows, and a whole stick figure ends the game in a loss; correct guesses get body parts erased. No pen or paper to play with? No worries, just fog up the car window and write clues there! Or buy a travel hangman set for $10 on Amazon.

Larz Anderson Auto Museum, Brookline, Massachusetts
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