Parent Picks · Updated 2026
Best AI tools for kids by age, parent-reviewed.
There is no single "AI tool for kids" — what fits a 7-year-old is different from what makes sense for an 11-year-old. Below are the AI tools we actually use across three age bands, with prices, risk notes, and how much parent time each one needs. Tools are listed in order of how often we reach for them in our own family.
How this list was made
Every tool on this page has been used in our family for at least two weeks before it was added. The age band is what we observed worked, not just what the tool maker says. We list pricing in dollars (US) and in the original currency where different.
We do not have a child-test panel or named pediatric reviewers — that would let us claim more, but we do not. The methodology page documents exactly what we test for and what we cannot test for. If a tool's risk profile changes, this page gets updated and the date at the top moves.
Picks for ages 6-8
Short, visual, win-fast tools. Reading is still developing; AI as a topic is too abstract on its own — pick tools where the kid can poke at the AI and see something happen in seconds.
KidsAiTools — 7-Day AI Adventure (Day 1-3)
Our own product. Days 1-3 free, no credit card.
Day 1 gets a 7-year-old creating their first AI image while a parent walks alongside. Day 2 introduces prompt iteration; Day 3 is parent-kid review. We built this for our own 6-year-old; the early-day pacing reflects what actually held his attention.
Watch out: It is not a hands-off product. If the parent is not in the room for Days 1-3 the experience flattens.
A 6-year-old can play it solo in 90 seconds. Demonstrates pattern matching: when the AI cannot guess, it is teaching the kid that AI sees patterns rather than meaning.
Watch out: It is a Google product and the drawings go to Google's research dataset by default. No PII is collected, but parents who care about that should know.
Picks for ages 9-10
Reading is solid; the kid can write a sentence-long prompt and read the answer. This is where prompt-iteration and "compare two outputs" actually start to land.
KidsAiTools — 7-Day AI Adventure (full)
Our own product. The full Day 1-7 arc.
Days 4-7 take a 9-10 year-old through prompt iteration, comparing two outputs, building a portfolio piece, and a parent-kid rules conversation. By Day 7 the kid has a shareable creation and a Pro-tier certificate.
Watch out: The certificate is Pro-only; on the free tier you get the experience but not the printable.
The strongest free option for a 9+ year-old who is curious about how AI is built rather than just using it. The Machine Learning for Kids extension lets them train a tiny model in 20 minutes.
The OpenAI Terms of Use set the floor at 13. We list it because many families share an adult account with a 9-10 year-old as a parent-led research tool — that's a parent decision, not something we recommend without supervision.
Watch out: Default model can produce confidently wrong answers. The kid does not yet have the reflexes to catch them. Parent-in-seat for any session.
Picks for ages 11-12
A 12-year-old can iterate on a prompt without help, push back on a wrong answer, and use AI as a real tool rather than a toy. This is the band where the conversation shifts from "is this safe?" to "is this changing how my kid thinks?".
KidsAiTools — 7-Day AI Adventure
Our own product. Best as a primer + portfolio piece.
For an 11-12 year-old this is one weekend of work, not seven days. The value is the parent-kid rules conversation and the certificate; if your kid is already comfortable with AI, treat it as a reset rather than a tutorial.
By 12 most kids can hold their own with the adult tools. We keep the parent in the loop for the first month — not for safety but for prompt-quality coaching, which is the actual learnable skill.
Watch out: Homework-shortcut risk is real at this age. The family rules from Step 5 of the framework matter more than the tool choice.
Quick comparison
A side-by-side of the most-asked dimensions. Use this if you only have a minute and want to compare 4 of the picks above.
KidsAiTools 7-Day Adventure | Quick, Draw! Google | Scratch MIT | ChatGPT OpenAI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Best fit ages | 6-12 | 6-10 | 8-12 | 13+ per ToS |
| Designed for kids | ||||
| Parent dashboard | ||||
| No public chat | ||||
| Account / signup needed | Optional Days 1-3 | Optional | ||
| Free tier | Days 1-3 | |||
| Paid tier | $9.90/mo | $20/mo | ||
| Strength | Structured 7-day arc | Fastest "aha" | Build-your-own AI | Most capable |
Pricing reflects April 2026 list prices. The "designed for kids" column flags whether the tool maker explicitly aims at the 6-12 band; ChatGPT is the obvious "no" because OpenAI documents 13+ as their floor.
Want to start with the one we built ourselves?
Days 1-3 free, no credit card. About 15 minutes per day.
Try our 7-Day AI Adventure freeWho is this list for?
We try to be honest about who actually benefits from this list.
You should keep reading if…
- Your child is 6-12
- You have time to be in the room for the first few sessions
- You want a short list of vetted tools, not a 50-item directory
- You care about a tool fitting the age, not just being labelled "for kids"
- You read English or Mandarin — both versions of this page are first-class
You can skip this if…
- Your child is under 6 (KidsAiTools is rated 6-12 specifically)
- Your child is 13+ — the adult tools are more capable and the supervision overhead is lower
- You want a single AI app with a strict parental control panel — that does not really exist yet at the depth we would want
- You want pure coding tutorials — Scratch / Code.org get you there faster than this list
Frequently asked questions
Are any of these "officially safe for kids"?+
Why not include Character.AI / Replika / Snapchat AI?+
How often does this list update?+
Can my school use this list?+
Why does KidsAiTools come first on the 6-8 list?+
Does any of this work in Mandarin?+
Where do I report a tool that should be on this list?+
Related reading
- Is ChatGPT safe for kids? — Detailed parent guide to the most-asked tool.
- How to teach AI to kids at home — A 5-step framework that works with these tools.
- How we review AI tools — The rubric, the limits, what we cannot test yet.
- Full AI tools directory — Every tool we have reviewed, sortable by category.