The post 23 Water Games Your Kids Will Beg to Play Again (All Under $20 Total) appeared first on Penny Pinchin' Mom.
The water bill shouldn’t spike just because your kids need something to do. Summer camp costs hundreds, community pools require memberships, and splash pads mean driving somewhere and paying to park. I learned the hard way one summer that entertainment doesn’t have to drain your wallet.
This list gives you 23 water games you can set up with stuff from Dollar Tree and your kitchen drawer. The Ice Block Treasure Hunt keeps kids digging through melting ice for small toys, Slip and Slide Bowling turns a $1.25 plastic sheet into a backyard carnival, and the Bucket Brigade Challenge wears them out while actually watering your garden. Stock up for under $20 total, and you’re covered for the whole summer.

1. Sponge Relay Race

Grab a bucket, some cheap sponges (a $1.25 pack at Dollar Tree), and set up two stations in your yard. Kids race to soak a sponge in one bucket, run it to the empty bucket, and squeeze out as much water as possible. First team to fill their bucket wins. This kept my grandkids busy for over an hour last summer, and the best part is that everyone gets soaked without anyone getting hurt. Works for ages 4 and up. Set the buckets closer together for little ones who’ll get tired running, or add obstacles for teens who need more challenge.
2. Target Practice Squirt Gun Showdown

Stick plastic cups on a fence or clothesline and let kids knock them off with dollar store squirt guns (you’ll pay $1.25 each). Write point values on the cups with a Sharpie. Old yogurt containers work great set up at different distances, so younger kids get closer targets worth fewer points while teens have to nail cups 15 feet away. The whole setup costs under $3 if you use containers you already have. This one’s great for mixed ages because everyone can play at their own level without feeling left out.
3. Ice Block Treasure Hunt

Freeze small toys or coins in empty milk jugs or ice cream containers filled with water the night before. Hand each kid a squirt gun and race to melt the ice and claim the treasure inside. My grandkids loved this on those 95-degree afternoons when even I wanted to play in the water. The ice lasts about 20-30 minutes, depending on how hot it is, which is perfect for attention spans. Add food coloring to the water before freezing to make it look more exciting, and use cheap plastic rings or bouncy balls as prizes.
4. Bucket Brigade Challenge

Line up teams with a full bucket at one end and an empty bucket at the far end. Kids pass cups of water down the line to fill the end bucket. First team to overflow their bucket wins. You need two buckets ($1.25 each at Dollar Tree) and plastic cups you probably already have. The chaos is half the fun because water goes everywhere. Space kids about three feet apart for younger groups, or make teens stand farther to increase difficulty.
5. Slip and Slide Bowling

Spread painter’s plastic on a slight slope, soap it up with dish soap, and set up empty 2-liter bottles as pins at the bottom. Kids slide down and knock over as many bottles as possible. For about $3, you get a backyard carnival that beats those expensive slip-and-slide kits that rip after one use. Fill the bottles with a little water so they don’t blow away but still fall easily. Hose down the plastic constantly to keep it slippery, and move the bottles around between rounds to keep it interesting.
6. Water Balloon Piñata
Fill balloons with water, tie them to tree branches at different heights, and blindfold kids with a plastic bat or pool noodle to swing at them. Costs may be $2 for a pack of balloons. The anticipation of when they’ll get soaked makes everyone scream and laugh. Hang them lower than you think because even teens miss more than they hit. Little kids do better with bigger balloons hung within easy reach. Have extra filled balloons ready because once kids see how fun it is, they’ll want multiple turns.
7. Sprinkler Limbo
If you’ve already got a sprinkler, this costs nothing. Turn it on and have kids limbo under the spray instead of a stick. Lower the sprinkler head or adjust the spray pattern between rounds to make it harder. Everyone gets soaked, which is the whole point on a hot day. For little kids who can’t limbo that low, let them just run through and call it a win. Works best with an adjustable sprinkler so you can control the height.
8. Drip, Drip, Splash
The water version of Duck, Duck, Goose costs absolutely nothing. Kids sit in a circle while one walks around with a cup of water, barely dripping it on heads until they choose someone for the big splash and run. The tension builds because nobody knows when the splash is coming. Refill the cup between rounds, and have towels nearby for kids who don’t want wet hair but want to keep playing.
9. Sponge Tag
One person is “it” and tags others by hitting them with a soaked sponge. Get a pack of sponges for $1.25 and keep a bucket of water nearby for reloading. Kids can freeze and become unfrozen when someone squeezes a wet sponge over their head. Little kids love it because the sponges don’t hurt as balls do. For older kids, add a rule that you can block with your hands or dodge within a certain boundary.
10. Water Balloon Toss
Partner up and toss a water balloon back and forth, taking one step backwards after each successful catch. The last pair with an unbroken balloon wins. A pack of balloons runs about $1.25. This is the one game where everyone pays attention, and nobody’s checking their phone. Fill balloons to different sizes so some are easier to catch, and some are ready to explode at the slightest touch. Keep a bucket of filled balloons ready so pairs can jump back in after their break.
11. DIY Water Blob
Spread a painter’s plastic sheet (costs $3 for a big one) on flat ground and tape the edges except for one corner. Use a hose to fill it with water until it’s about two inches deep, then tape the last corner shut. Kids can jump, slide, and roll on this giant water cushion. Check for sticks or rocks underneath first, unless you want leaks. Let the water warm in the sun for 30 minutes before letting little kids play on it.
12. Coin Dive Competition
Toss coins or plastic rings into a kiddie pool and have kids dive to collect them. The kiddie pool might be your only cost if you don’t have one (around $10-15, but you’ll use it all summer). Pennies work great if you have a jar full of them. Teens do better with items that sink faster and are harder to spot. Make it harder by adding a time limit or requiring them to collect items in a specific order. For kids without a pool, use a large storage bin filled with water instead.
13. Water Balloon Baseball
Pitch water balloons instead of balls and use a plastic bat. The batter runs bases while fielders chase the balloon pieces or try to catch it before it breaks. Comes in under $2 for balloons. This works best for older kids and teens who can hit the balloon without it breaking on the bat. Fill balloons less full, so they survive the hit and break when they land. Set up bases with towels or pool noodles. The fielding team gets soaked trying to catch, and the batting team gets soaked when balloons break on contact.
14. Frozen T-Shirt Race
Soak t-shirts in water, freeze them flat overnight, and race to see who can thaw and put theirs on first. This costs nothing if you use old shirts you already have. The whole process takes about 20-30 minutes of hilarious struggling. Kids can stomp on them, sit on them, or pour water over them to speed up thawing. Works best on scorching hot days when ice-cold shirts sound refreshing instead of miserable. Use smaller shirts for little kids since they’re easier to thaw and fit.
15. Cup Stack Splash
Stack plastic cups into a pyramid and let kids take turns shooting them down with squirt guns from 10 feet away. You need about 10 cups (use what you have or grab a pack for $1.25) and cheap squirt guns. The first person to knock down the whole pyramid wins. The cups fly everywhere when they’re hit just right, which makes kids want to keep trying. For younger kids, move the shooting line closer or use fewer cups in the pyramid. Teens can compete for the fastest time or add rules like only hitting specific cups in order.
16. Over-Under Water Brigade
Teams line up single file and pass a cup of water over the first person’s head, under the next person’s legs, alternating down the line to fill a bucket at the end. You need two cups and two buckets (under $3 total if you’re buying everything). The team whose bucket fills first wins. Water spills constantly, which is half the entertainment. Make it harder for older kids by using smaller cups or requiring them to balance on one foot while passing.
17. Splash Zone Freeze Dance
One person controls the hose while music plays, and everyone dances. When the music stops, whoever’s in the spray zone gets soaked and sits out until the next round. This costs nothing if you already have a hose and speaker. The person with the hose has all the power, so rotate who gets that job to keep it fair. Little kids think it’s hilarious even when they’re the ones getting soaked. Play it when everyone wants to cool off anyway, and nobody minds losing.
18. Paint Brush Water Art Contest
Hand everyone cheap paintbrushes ($1.25 for a pack at Dollar Tree) and buckets of water to “paint” designs on the fence, driveway, or side of the house. The designs disappear as they dry, so kids keep creating new masterpieces. This one’s great for artistic kids who need a break from high-energy games. Works for ages 3 and up since there’s no mess to clean up. Give little kids bigger brushes for easier control, or challenge older kids to paint detailed pictures before the sun erases them.
19. Hose Jump Rope
Two people hold a running hose stretched between them while others jump over the stream. Costs nothing beyond your water bill. Start with the stream low to the ground and raise it higher after everyone clears it. Kids who get hit by the spray are out until the next round. This works better than jump rope for mixed ages because you can adjust the difficulty instantly. Keep the water pressure consistent so kids can time their jumps, and don’t aim the spray directly at jumpers unless everyone’s okay getting drenched.
20. Soaked Sock Toss
Fill old socks with water, tie the ends, and play catch or toss them into laundry baskets at different distances. This costs nothing if you use socks with holes that you were going to throw out anyway. The socks are easier for little kids to catch than water balloons because they don’t break, but they still explode water when squeezed. Set baskets at 5, 10, and 15 feet away with different point values. Darker socks hide stains better if you’re using old ones from the rag pile.
21. Water Cup Relay Obstacle Course
Set up obstacles like chairs to crawl under, pool noodles to step over, and buckets to circle around. Kids race while balancing a full cup of water, trying not to spill. First one to the finish line with the most water left wins. You need one cup per player and household items for obstacles. Younger kids can walk instead of running, or use smaller cups that are easier to balance. For teens, require them to hold the cup on their head or behind their back.
22. Spray Bottle Target Painting
Tape paper plates or cardboard to a fence and fill spray bottles (about $1.25 each at Dollar Tree) with water mixed with food coloring. Kids spray to create colorful splatter art. The whole setup totals maybe $5, including the food coloring. This one’s perfect for kids who want to play with water but don’t want to get completely soaked. Use one color per bottle so kids can claim their marks, and hang white paper for the best color contrast.
23. Musical Sprinklers
Place multiple sprinklers around the yard and play music while kids run through them. When the music stops, everyone freezes wherever they are. Anyone standing in a spray zone at that moment sits out for one round. This costs nothing if you already own sprinklers. The anticipation of where to stand makes everyone pay attention instead of just mindlessly running through water. Adjust sprinkler patterns between rounds so the safe zones keep changing. Little ones can team up with older siblings who’ll steer them toward dry spots.
Beat the Boredom Without Breaking the Bank
You shouldn’t have to choose between expensive memberships and another summer of the same two activities on repeat. These games turn your backyard into the place your kids want to be, no camp fees or parking hassles required.
Start with the Ice Block Treasure Hunt if you need something that’ll keep them busy for an hour, set up Slip and Slide Bowling when the whole neighborhood shows up, or pull out the Sponge Relay Race on those afternoons when they’re bouncing off the walls. One Dollar Tree run, and you’ve got options all season. Your kids will be too busy laughing and cooling off to complain, and the water bill spike? It’s just keeping everyone sane this summer.
The post 23 Water Games Your Kids Will Beg to Play Again (All Under $20 Total) appeared first on Penny Pinchin' Mom.



