How to Travel with School-Age Kids (6-17 Years Old)

School-age kids need structured activities, educational components, and more independence than toddlers. Plan 2-3 activities per day with built-in downtime, involve them in planning, and budget 30-40% more than adult-only trips for activities and food.

  1. Involve them in trip planning. Give each child 1-2 destination choices and let them research activities. This builds excitement and reduces resistance to your itinerary.
  2. Plan for energy levels and attention spans. Schedule active morning activities, quieter afternoons, and flexible evenings. Kids 6-10 can handle 4-5 hours of tourism daily. Ages 11-17 can do 6-8 hours with breaks.
  3. Book connecting or nearby rooms. Two hotel rooms or vacation rentals with separate sleeping areas prevent family meltdowns and give everyone space to decompress.
  4. Pack entertainment for transitions. Download offline games, audiobooks, and movies. Bring portable chargers. Flights and car rides need 2-3 hours of content per child.
  5. Build in educational elements. Visit one museum, historic site, or cultural experience every 2-3 days. Kids retain more when they can touch, explore, or participate rather than just observe.
  6. Plan for independence. Give kids 12+ spending money and decision-making opportunities. Let them navigate with maps or choose restaurants within your budget.
How do I handle different interests between kids of different ages?
Alternate between activities that appeal to different age groups. Pair a science museum (older kids) with a playground visit (younger kids) on the same day. Give older kids photography challenges during activities that might bore them.
What if my child gets homesick or overwhelmed?
Pack a comfort item from home and establish daily video calls with friends or grandparents. Schedule one 'slow day' every 3-4 travel days with familiar activities like swimming or playing in a park.
How do I keep costs manageable with multiple kids?
Look for family passes at attractions, book accommodations with kitchenettes to prepare some meals, and research free activities like beaches, hiking trails, and city parks. Many museums offer free admission days or family discounts.
Should I stick to family-friendly destinations?
Not necessarily. Paris, Tokyo, and other major cities offer excellent family experiences with proper planning. Focus on destinations with good infrastructure, reliable healthcare, and varied activity options rather than just 'family resorts.'