The post 23 Backyard Games Under $5 That’ll End ‘I’m Bored’ All Summer appeared first on Penny Pinchin' Mom.
Summer stretches ahead, and the kids are already saying they’re bored. Store-bought yard games cost $30-50 each, and you need at least three to keep everyone happy for more than twenty minutes. That guilty feeling when you say “not right now” to another plastic game at Target? You’re not alone.
These 23 games each cost under $5, and most take less than fifteen minutes to build. Pool Noodle Ring Toss uses two $1.25 noodles and keeps kids playing for hours. The Painter’s Tape Obstacle Course lives in your garage and gets rebuilt differently every weekend. Glow Stick Ring Toss turns into the neighborhood’s favorite night game for about $2 total.

1. Pool Noodle Ring Toss

Three pool noodles from Dollar Tree ($3.75 total) become a full ring toss game in about ten minutes. Cut one noodle into 6-inch rings with a bread knife and duct tape the ends together. Use the other two noodles as standing posts by slicing halfway up the middle and sliding them onto a sturdy stick or dowel you already have. The total cost runs under $4 if you scrounge the base from your garage. My grandkids played this for two hours straight at their birthday party, and I stored the rings in a mesh laundry bag between uses.
2. Painter’s Tape Obstacle Course

When the kids say they’re bored for the third time before lunch, grab your roll of painter’s tape. A $3 roll creates an entire backyard obstacle course with lines to balance on, boxes to jump between, and zones for different challenges. Stick it to your fence, deck, or patio to mark paths, hopscotch squares, or target zones. The tape peels off clean when you’re done, and one roll lasts all summer for different course designs. Change the layout every few days to keep it interesting.
3. Bucket Ball Toss

Three plastic buckets from Dollar Tree ($3.75), plus tennis balls you already have, make a perfect carnival-style game. Arrange the buckets at different distances and assign point values with a permanent marker. Kids toss balls trying to land them inside, and you can make it harder by putting buckets on their sides or stacking them. I set ours up for a 4th of July party once, and even the adults got competitive trying to beat each other’s scores.
4. DIY Cornhole with Cardboard Boxes

Those Amazon boxes piling up in your garage become cornhole boards for free. Cut a hole in two sturdy boxes, prop them at an angle with bricks or wood scraps, and fill small fabric bags with dried beans (about $2 for enough beans to make 8 bags). Duct tape the bags closed, and you’re playing in 20 minutes. The boxes won’t survive rain, but they fold flat for storage and work great for a weekend of backyard games before recycling day.
5. Glow Stick Ring Toss for Night Games

For under $2 total, you get an hour of entertainment when the sun goes down. Grab a pack of glow sticks at the dollar store ($1.25) and activate them right before playing. Toss the rings onto sticks, bottles, or even just draw circles on the ground with chalk. Buy extra glow stick packs during back-to-school sales, and you’ll have enough for the whole season.
6. Tic Tac Toe Board with Rocks
Paint ten smooth rocks you collected from the yard or a park. Five get X’s, five get O’s, and you need about $1 worth of craft paint to cover them all. Draw your tic tac toe grid on the patio with sidewalk chalk or use sticks to make the lines in the grass. The rocks are stored in an old coffee can, and the game works anywhere you can draw nine squares. My grandson added his own twist by painting the rocks like ladybugs and bees instead of X’s and O’s.
7. Water Balloon Piñata
String a clothesline between two trees and hang filled water balloons from it using ribbon or string (total cost around $3 for balloons and string if you’re buying new). Blindfold players and let them swing a pool noodle or stick to pop the balloons. It’s basically piñata rules, but everyone gets soaked, which is perfect for hot summer afternoons. Set up takes maybe 15 minutes, and this works great for birthday parties or just a random Tuesday when temperatures hit 90 degrees.
8. PVC Pipe Limbo Bar
One 10-foot section of PVC pipe from the hardware store costs about $3, and that’s your whole game right there. Two people hold the ends while everyone else tries to shimmy under without touching the bar. Lower it after each round until someone wins. The pipe stores in your garage and doubles as a hurdle for obstacle courses or a balance beam if you lay it on the ground.
9. Sponge Bullseye Target
Draw a bullseye on your fence or garage door with chalk, then soak cheap sponges in water and throw them at the target. A 10-pack of sponges costs about $1.25, and a bucket for water is something you probably already own. The sponges dry out between games, so you can reuse them all summer. Assign point values to each ring and keep score, or just let little kids throw until they’re tired. The chalk washes off with the next rain.
10. Tin Can Bowling
Save ten empty cans, rinse them out, and stack them in a pyramid. Any ball works for knocking them down, but a soccer ball or kickball gives you the satisfying crash sound kids love. Leave them as-is for a completely free game, or spray paint them if you want a fancier look (about $4 for a can of paint that’ll cover all ten). Stack them on your driveway, sidewalk, or any flat surface. They are stored inside each other in the garage.
11. Backyard Twister with Washable Paint
A cheap plastic tablecloth for around a dollar plus washable paint markers ($2) creates a portable Twister board you can roll up and store. Use a paper plate as your template to trace circles in red, blue, yellow, and green. Make a spinner from cardboard and a brad, or just call out moves yourself. The tablecloth version survives rain and stores in seconds, unlike spray paint on grass that needs constant remaking.
12. Rope Quoits Ring Game
Buy 6 feet of rope from the hardware store (under $2) and tie it into three rings about 8 inches across. Pound a stake or stick into the ground as your target post. Players stand back and toss the rope rings, trying to loop them over the stake. This is basically fancy horseshoes, but way safer for kids and easier to store since the rings hang on a hook in your garage.
13. Balloon Pop Challenge
Inflate balloons and tape them to a large cardboard box or piece of plywood. Instead of actual darts, players throw wet sponges or beanbags to pop the balloons or knock them off. Balloons cost about $2 for a pack that’ll last several games. Tape small prizes or point values inside some balloons before inflating them for extra excitement. This takes less than 30 minutes to set up and looks impressive enough for parties.
14. Giant Outdoor Dominoes
One 8-foot 2×4 board from the hardware store costs about $4 and gives you 8 dominoes when cut into foot-long sections. Paint them white and add black dots with a permanent marker to create the domino patterns. Kids can play traditional domino games on the patio, or just enjoy knocking them over in chain reactions. These store easily stacked in a corner of the garage.
15. Hula Hoop Target Toss
Hang hula hoops from tree branches at different heights using rope or bungee cords. Toss beanbags, balled-up socks, or soft balls through the hoops to score points. Two hula hoops from Dollar Tree come in at $2.50, and you probably have something to throw already. Lower hoops for little kids, higher ones for older players, or make some swings for an extra challenge. The hoops unhook in seconds for storage.
16. Noodle Jousting Battle
For about $1.25 per noodle, you get pool noodles you can cut in half so each player gets a 3-foot “sword.” Players stand on stumps, buckets, or marked spots and try to knock each other off balance without leaving their base. The first person to step off their spot loses. Three noodles give you enough for six players, and they stack in a corner when you’re done playing.
17. Bottle Bowling with Recycled Containers
Fill six empty plastic bottles with a little sand or water to weigh them, then set them up like bowling pins. Any ball knocks them down, but a playground ball that costs $1 at Walmart works perfectly. The bottles are free if you’re already buying drinks, and the sand came from your driveway. Arrange them in different patterns to change the difficulty, or let kids decorate the bottles with permanent markers before playing.
18. Sidewalk Chalk Maze Challenge
Your driveway transforms into a puzzle game with a $1.25 box of sidewalk chalk. Draw a giant maze with dead ends, shortcuts, and a finish line, then time kids as they race through it. Make it harder by adding rules like “hop on one foot” or “walk backwards through the blue sections.” The chalk washes away with rain or a garden hose, so you can design a completely new maze every week. I used to add silly challenges at certain intersections, and the kids would spend an entire Saturday afternoon racing each other through different versions.
19. Frisbee Golf Course Using Household Items
Mark nine “holes” around your yard using laundry baskets, cardboard boxes, or hula hoops as targets. Players throw a frisbee (about $1 at Dollar Tree), trying to land it in each target in the fewest throws. Write a scorecard on scrap paper and let kids design the course layout themselves. Moving the targets creates an entirely new course, and the frisbee lives in your car for park trips.
20. Beach Ball Balance Relay
Two beach balls from Dollar Tree ($2.50 total) plus items you own create a relay race that gets kids laughing every time. Players balance the beach ball between their knees and waddle to the finish line without dropping it. Add challenges like carrying it on their head, pushing it with their nose, or passing it to teammates without using their hands. The balls deflate flat for winter storage in about two seconds.
21. Stick and Rope Ladder Golf
Tie three golf balls into old socks or fabric scraps, connecting pairs with 2-foot rope sections (rope costs about $1.50 for enough to make three bolas). Build a simple ladder target from sticks and twine, or just use a real ladder if you have one. Players toss the bolas, trying to wrap them around the ladder rungs for points. The top rung scores highest, the bottom rung scores lowest. The bolas hang on a nail in the garage between games.
22. Nature Scavenger Hunt Bingo
Print or draw bingo cards on paper you already have, filling squares with items kids can find in your yard: smooth rock, yellow flower, pinecone, something rough, something soft. First player to get five in a row wins, but most kids just enjoy the hunting part. Laminate the cards with clear packing tape or just print new ones each time. This costs absolutely nothing if you have paper and a printer, maybe $1.25 for markers if you’re drawing cards by hand.
23. Frozen T-Shirt Race
Soak old t-shirts in water, fold them flat, and freeze them solid overnight. On game day, teams race to thaw and unfold their frozen shirt first, then one player has to put it on. The shirts cost nothing if you’re using ones headed to donation anyway. Kids can stomp on them, sit on them, or just wait for the sun to do the work. This is perfect for hot summer days when everyone’s already sweating.
Your Backyard Is Ready
You don’t have to say “not right now” anymore. Store-bought games will still be overpriced next month, but this weekend, your kids can play something new that you made. These games work, and they cost almost nothing.
Start with Pool Noodle Ring Toss if you need something done in ten minutes, set up the Painter’s Tape Obstacle Course if you want a game that changes every time, or save Glow Stick Ring Toss for Friday night when the neighborhood kids show up. You’ve got 23 options here for less than what one plastic game costs at Target. Pick what sounds fun, grab what’s already in your garage, and give the kids in your life the summer they’ve been asking for.
The post 23 Backyard Games Under $5 That’ll End ‘I’m Bored’ All Summer appeared first on Penny Pinchin' Mom.



