The best way to get kids excited about science is to get involved with hands-on experiments. While some experiments require expensive lab equipment or dangerous chemicals, there are plenty of cool projects you can do with regular household items. We’ve rounded up a big collection of easy science experiments that anybody can try, and kids are going to love them!
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Easy Chemistry Science Experiments
1. Taste the rainbow

Teach your students about diffusion while creating a beautiful and tasty rainbow. Create a circle of Skittles on a plate, then pour water in the middle of the bowl. Watch how the colors mix together once the liquid is added.
Learn more: Skittles Rainbow Experiment: How-To Plus Free Worksheet
2. Explore a non-Newtonian fluid

Create a simple mixture of water and cornstarch to make Oobleck. Have students test how its materials can react under different stress conditions. Because Oobleck doesn’t follow the usual rules of liquids, it can be a lot of fun for your class to experience this anomaly.
Learn more: How To Make Oobleck (Free Printable Worksheet)
3. Make elephant toothpaste

Try this variation of erupting projects. This fun project uses yeast and a hydrogen peroxide solution to create overflowing “elephant toothpaste.”
Learn more: Elephant Toothpaste (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
4. Demonstrate the “magic” leakproof bag

All you need is a zip-top plastic bag, sharp pencils, and water. Fill up the zip-top bag with water, then quickly poke the pencils all the way through. Once students are suitably impressed, teach them how the “trick” works by explaining the chemistry of polymers.
Learn more: Leakproof Bag Experiment (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
5. Layer liquids
This density demo is a little complicated, but the effects are spectacular. Slowly layer liquids like honey, dish soap, water, and rubbing alcohol in a glass. Kids will be amazed when the liquids float one on top of the other like magic (except it is really science).
6. Watch water move colors

Fill three small cups with water and add food coloring in each: red, yellow and blue. Then, set an empty cup next to each filled cup, creating a circle. Add a folded strip of paper towel inside each filled cup, then into an empty cup, alternating the pattern. Check back in about an hour and notice how the colored water moved to each cup!
Learn more: Rainbow Walking Water Experiment: How-To Plus Free Worksheet
7. Create eggshell chalk
Eggshells contain calcium, the same material that makes chalk. Grind them up and mix them with flour, water, and food coloring to make your very own sidewalk chalk.
8. Turn milk into plastic
This sounds a lot more complicated than it is, so don’t be afraid to give it a try. Use simple kitchen supplies to create plastic polymers from plain old milk. Boil one cup of milk in the microwave (about 30 seconds), then mix it with 1 tablespoon of vinegar—the resulting substance will curdle. Line a sieve with paper towels and pour the mixture into it to filter out the solids. Squeeze all liquid out with paper towels, then form the substance into any shape you like (you can use a cookie cutter for this). When it’s completely dry (about 24 hours), you’ll have a hard plastic form.
9. Create your own chalk paint

Explore mixtures and solutions by creating your own sidewalk chalk paint. Combine equal parts cornstarch and water for the base of the paint. Pour the solution into a muffin tin, then add food coloring to each spot. Take the solution outside and paint different images on the sidewalk.
10. Test pH using cabbage
Teach kids about acids and bases without needing pH test strips. Simply boil some red cabbage and use the resulting water to test various substances—acids turn red and bases turn green.
11. Mix up some slime

Another non-Newtonian fluid—something that has properties of liquids and solids—is slime. Test how the slime responds to different tests and whether it acts like a solid or liquid in that situation. We have a variety of ways to make slime, so try a few different recipes to find the one you like best.
Learn more: 4 Slime Recipes (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
12. Clean some old coins
Use common household items to make old oxidized coins clean and shiny again in this simple chemistry experiment. Ask kids to predict (hypothesize) which will work best, then expand the learning by doing some research to explain the results.
14. Make a naked egg

Take off the shell of an egg without using your hands! Soak a fresh egg in a jar of vinegar to dissolve the calcium carbonate in the eggshell to discover the membrane underneath that holds the egg together.
Learn more: Egg and Vinegar Experiment (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
15. Blow up a balloon without blowing

Fill an empty plastic bottle with vinegar. Then, attach a balloon filled with baking soda on top of the water bottle. With the balloon still attached, dump the baking soda into the vinegar. The baking soda and vinegar balloon experiment demonstrates the reactions between acids and bases when you fill a bottle with vinegar and a balloon with baking soda.
Learn more: Baking Soda and Vinegar Balloon (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
16. Assemble a DIY lava lamp

Explore density by combining oil, water, and antacid tablets. Notice how the bubbles move up and down in the bottle by the chemical reaction between the antacid tablet and water. Water is denser, so it sinks to the bottom. Oil is less dense, so it floats on top, thus creating a lava lamp effect.
Learn more: DIY Lava Lamp Experiment: How-To Plus Free Worksheet
17. Explore how sugary drinks affect teeth
The calcium content of eggshells makes them a great stand-in for teeth. Use eggs to explore how soda and juice can stain teeth and wear down the enamel. Expand your learning by trying different toothpaste-and-toothbrush combinations to see how effective they are.
18. Blow giant bubbles
Kids learn about surface tension as they engineer these large bubble-blowing wands. Create the bubble solution by using dish soap, water, and glycerin. By dipping the bubble wand in the solution and moving it around, notice the large bubbles being created.
Learn more: Giant Soap Bubbles (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
19. Test solubility
You’ll need clear cups, water, and different substances to test, like sugar, salt, sand, and oil. Add each substance to a separate cup of water and stir to see which ones dissolve and which ones don’t. This helps kids compare solubility and understand how different types of matter interact with water.
20. Play with absorption using salt painting

Paint in a different way using watercolors and salt. Trace a printed image with liquid white school glue, then generously pour glue on the salt. Let the salt dry, then paint with watercolor paints. Notice how the salt absorbs the watercolors. When kids drip paint onto the salted glue, the paint is pulled into the salt crystals.
Learn more: How To Create a Salt Painting (Plus Free Printable Worksheet)
21. Extinguish flames with carbon dioxide
Light a candle and talk about what fire needs in order to survive. Then, create an acid-base reaction and “pour” the carbon dioxide to extinguish the flame. The CO2 gas acts like a liquid, suffocating the fire.
22. Shoot a soda geyser sky-high

Combine Mentos and soda to create an explosive reaction! Although you can’t see it, dissolved carbon dioxide is the invisible substance that makes soda bubbly and fizzy. As long as the soda remains in the bottle, the gas is kept in place through the pressurized conditions. When you shake a bottle of soda, some of that gas is released and the bubbles stick to nucleation sites or tiny defects on the inside of the container. If you open the shaken bottle, the bubbles will rapidly rise and push the liquid up and out of the bottle.
Learn more: Mentos and Coke Experiment (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
23. Send secret messages with invisible ink
Turn your kids into secret agents. Write messages with a paintbrush dipped in lemon juice, then hold the paper over a heat source and watch the invisible become visible as oxidation goes to work.
24. Create dancing popcorn

This is a fun version of the classic baking-soda-and-vinegar experiment, perfect for the younger crowd. The bubbly mixture causes popcorn to dance around in the water.
Learn more: Dancing Popcorn (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
Easy Physics Science Experiments
25. Send a tea bag flying
Learn about the science behind hot-air balloons with this outdoor experiment. Take an empty tea bag and shape it into a cylinder. Light the tea bag on fire and watch how it rises in the air. Hot air expands and becomes less dense than the cooler air outside, causing the tea bag to float.
26. Create magic milk

Pour milk into a shallow dish. Then add small drops of food coloring onto the surface of the milk. Using a cotton swab dipped in dish soap, lightly brush the surface of the milk. The dish soap breaks the surface tension of the milk, and the soap molecules try to attach to the fat molecules in the milk. This causes swirls and bursts of fun rainbow colors!
Learn more: Magic Milk Experiment (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
27. Create a balloon rocket
You’ll need a balloon, a straw, string, and tape. Thread the string through the straw, tape the balloon to the straw, inflate the balloon, and let it go. The escaping air pushes the balloon along the string, demonstrating Newton’s third law of motion: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
28. Test a car on a rolling ramp
You’ll need a toy car or a ball and a ramp made from a board or piece of cardboard. Place the car at the top of the ramp and let it roll down, then observe how fast it goes and how far it travels. This demonstrates gravity pulling objects downward and shows how the steepness of a ramp and friction affect motion.
29. Create static electricity

Draw and cut out different shapes onto tissue paper. Tape one end of the shape onto a hard surface. Rub the balloon on top of your hair to create static electricity. Float the balloon over the tissue paper shape to watch it rise up in the air from the static charge.
30. Create a simple compass
You’ll need a sewing needle, a magnet, a small bowl of water, and a piece of cork or a bottle cap. Rub the needle with the magnet to magnetize it, place it on the cork or cap, and float it on the water. The needle aligns with the Earth’s magnetic field, showing kids how a simple compass works to find north.
31. Test air pressure
Grab a cup of water and an index card. Place the card over the top, flip the cup upside down, and carefully let go. The card stays in place and the water doesn’t spill. This shows how air pressure pushes up on the card with enough force to hold the water inside the cup.
32. Make a pendulum swing
You’ll need a string and a small weight like a washer or toy. Tie the string to the weight and hang it from a hook, doorknob, or sturdy rod so it can swing freely. Pull it to one side and let it go to see how gravity makes it swing and how energy changes between potential and kinetic as it moves back and forth.
33. Launch a bottle rocket

Grab a cork, plastic bottle, cardboard, duct tape, and bike pump to learn about Newton’s third law of motion: for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Learn more: Bottle Rocket (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
34. Make sparks with steel wool
You only need a piece of steel wool and a 9-volt battery. When you touch the battery to the steel wool, the electric current heats the metal strands, causing them to burn and create sparks. This demonstrates a chemical change and a chain reaction, because once a few strands ignite, the reaction quickly spreads through the rest of the steel wool.
35. Levitate a Ping-Pong ball
Attach a bendy straw to a plastic bottle, squeeze the bottle to blow air upward, and place a Ping-Pong ball above the straw so it lifts and floats. When you blow air through the straw, the fast-moving air creates an area of lower pressure above the Ping-Pong ball. The higher air pressure around the ball pushes it upward, making it float or “levitate.” This demonstrates Bernoulli’s principle: faster-moving air has lower pressure.
36. Whip up a tornado in a bottle
All you need is a clear bottle filled with water and a little glitter. When you swirl the bottle in a circular motion and then set it down, the water spins fast, creating a sparkling vortex. This shows how a vortex forms when water moves in a circular pattern and gravity pulls it downward.
37. Monitor air pressure with a DIY barometer
You’ll need a glass jar, a balloon, a rubber band, a straw, tape, and a piece of paper with a scale. Stretch the balloon over the mouth of the jar and tape the straw on top as a pointer. As air pressure changes, the balloon surface moves up or down, making the straw rise or fall. This shows kids how a barometer measures air pressure to help predict the weather.
38. Pull an egg into a bottle
This classic easy science experiment never fails to delight. Use the power of air pressure to suck a hard-boiled egg into a bottle by lighting a piece of paper on fire and dropping it in the bottle before placing the egg at the bottle opening.
39. Test the pH of water

You’ll need water samples, pH strips (or a pH meter), and a container for each sample. Dip a pH strip into the water or use the meter to test each sample, then compare the results to see if the water is acidic, neutral, or basic. This experiment teaches kids about pH levels and how scientists measure the acidity or alkalinity of liquids.
40. String up some sticky ice
You’ll need an ice cube, a piece of string, and some salt. Lay the string on the ice cube, sprinkle a little salt on top, and wait a few seconds. The salt melts the ice slightly, and as it refreezes, the string sticks. This shows how salt affects melting and freezing and demonstrates the concept of freezing point depression.
41. “Flip” a drawing with water
You’ll need a clear glass or jar of water and a piece of paper with arrows drawn on it. Place the paper behind the glass of water and look through it. The arrows appear to flip direction. This demonstrates light refraction, showing how light bends when it passes from one medium (air) into another (water).
42. Add color to flowers

You’ll need white carnations, glasses or jars, water, and food coloring. Fill each glass with colored water and place a white carnation in it. Over time, the flowers absorb the colored water through their stems, showing how plants use capillary action to move water from their roots to their petals.
43. Use glitter to fight germs
Everyone knows that glitter is just like germs—it gets everywhere and is so hard to get rid of! Use that to your advantage and show kids how soap fights glitter and germs.
Learn more: Teach Kids How Germs Spread With This Free Printable Activity
44. Re-create the water cycle in a bag

You can do so many easy science experiments with a simple zip-top bag. Fill one partway with water and set it on a sunny windowsill to see how the water evaporates up and eventually “rains” down.
Learn more: Water Cycle Lesson Slides and Video
45. Learn about plant transpiration
You’ll need a small plant, a clear plastic bag, and a rubber band. Cover a leaf or small branch with the bag and secure it with the rubber band. After a while, water droplets appear inside the bag, showing how plants release excess water through transpiration.
46. Clean up an oil spill
You’ll need a shallow container filled with water, vegetable oil, items for cleaning up the spill (cotton balls, sponges, and pieces of paper towels), and small plastic animals. Pour oil on the water and let students try to remove it using the cleaning materials. This experiment teaches problem-solving and shows how engineers clean up environmental disasters like oil spills.
47. Construct a pair of model lungs

You’ll need straws, balloons, and rubber bands. Use a balloon and straw to create a simple lung model. When you blow into the straw, the balloon inflates like a lung. This demonstrates how our lungs fill with air, helping kids understand the respiratory system and how breathing works.
48. Experiment with rocks
You’ll need a variety of rocks and some vinegar. Pour a little vinegar on each rock and watch for bubbles. If it fizzes, the rock contains calcium carbonate, like limestone. This experiment teaches kids how to identify certain types of rocks using a simple chemical reaction.
49. Turn a bottle into a rain gauge
All you need is a plastic bottle, a ruler, and a permanent marker to make your own rain gauge. Monitor your measurements and see how they stack up against meteorology reports in your area.
50. Build landforms

You’ll need LEGO bricks or building blocks. Stack the bricks in layers to represent different rock layers, then gently push or slide sections to see how mountains, valleys, and other landforms can form. This experiment helps kids understand how Earth’s landforms are created through movement and pressure.
51. Take a play dough core sample
You’ll need different colors of play dough and a straw. Layer the play dough to represent the Earth’s crust, mantle, outer core, and inner core, then use the straw to take a “core sample” through the layers. This demonstrates the structure of the Earth and how scientists study its layers.
Learn more: Genius Ways To Use Play-Doh in the Classroom
52. Project the stars on your ceiling
You’ll need a paper cup, a pin or needle, tape, and a flashlight. Poke small holes in the bottom of the cup to represent stars, then shine the flashlight through the holes in a dark room. This DIY star projector shows how light and darkness affect what stars we can see, helping kids understand why stars are visible at night.
53. Make it rain
You’ll need a cup of water, shaving cream, and food coloring. Fill a cup with water, add a layer of shaving cream on top to represent a cloud, and drip food coloring onto the shaving cream. When the “cloud” gets too heavy, the colored droplets fall through the water like rain, showing how clouds hold moisture and release it as precipitation.
54. Blow up your fingerprint
You’ll need a balloon and some ink or washable paint. Lightly press your finger onto the ink, then onto the slightly inflated balloon. Inflate the balloon fully to see your fingerprint stretch and magnify, helping kids explore the unique patterns in fingerprints.
55. Snack on a DNA model
You’ll need Twizzlers, gumdrops, and toothpicks. Use the Twizzlers to represent the DNA backbone and gumdrops as the base pairs, connecting them with toothpicks. This hands-on model helps kids visualize the structure of DNA in a fun and edible way.
56. Dissect a flower

Take a nature walk and find a flower or two. Bring them home and take them apart to discover all the different parts of flowers.
Easy Engineering Experiments and STEM Challenges
57. Generate electricity with a potato

You’ll need a potato, a copper coin or wire, a zinc nail, and some connecting wires. Insert the copper and zinc into the potato and connect them with wires to a small LED or clock. The potato acts as a simple battery, generating electricity through a chemical reaction between the metals and the potato’s acids. This teaches kids how chemical energy can be converted into electrical energy.
Learn more: Potato Battery Experiment: How-To Plus Free Worksheet
58. Race a balloon-powered car

Create a balloon-powered car by attaching a straw to the end of a balloon. Then, tape the straw on top of a toy car. Blow up the balloon using the straw and watch how the car rolls when the air is released from the balloon.
Learn more: Balloon-Powered Car Experiment: How-To Plus Free Worksheet
59. Build a Ferris wheel
Use wood craft sticks to design and build your own Ferris wheel, then test different structures to see which design spins smoothly and supports the most weight. This activity teaches kids about engineering, balance, rotational motion, and how forces work together to keep a structure stable.
60. Design a phone stand
Use simple materials to design and build a DIY phone stand, testing different shapes and angles to see which one holds a phone securely. This activity teaches kids about engineering design, stability, and why everyday inventions, like phone stands, solve real problems by making our lives easier.
61. Conduct an egg drop

Put all their engineering skills to the test with an egg drop! Challenge kids to build a container from recycled items they find around the house that will protect an egg from a long fall. You can test their designs from a ladder or a tall structure at a playground (with adult supervision).
Learn more: Egg Drop Challenge Ideas
62. Engineer a roller coaster

You can use a variety of makerspace materials: straws, cardboard, tape, or building blocks. Build a small roller coaster track and roll a marble or small ball down it. This hands-on challenge teaches kids about gravity, friction, and motion while encouraging creativity and problem-solving.
63. Build a solar oven

Explore the power of the sun when you build your own solar ovens and use them to cook some yummy treats. This experiment takes a little more time and effort, but the results are always impressive.
Learn more: Solar Oven (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
64. Construct a bridge
You’ll need building materials like Popsicle sticks, LEGO bricks, or cardboard. Construct a bridge without using glue or tape, stacking and interlocking the pieces so it supports its own weight. This experiment teaches kids about engineering, balance, and how forces like tension and compression work in bridges.
65. Step through an index card
This is one easy science experiment that never fails to astonish. With carefully placed scissor cuts on an index card, you can make a loop large enough to fit a (small) human body through! Kids will be wowed as they learn about surface area.
66. Test weight distribution with cups
You’ll need several paper cups and some tape. Challenge kids to stack and arrange the cups to build a structure that can hold weight without collapsing. This activity teaches principles of physics, engineering, and structural design while encouraging problem-solving and creativity.
67. Build the tallest paper tower
You’ll need sheets of paper and tape. Challenge kids to build the tallest tower possible using only these materials. This activity teaches engineering principles, balance, and structural stability while encouraging creativity and problem-solving.
68. Use rubber bands to sound out acoustics
Create a simple rubber-band “guitar” to explore how sound waves change based on the materials and shapes around them. Students can stretch rubber bands of different thicknesses and tensions across an open box, then pluck them to hear how the sound varies. This quick build always becomes a kid favorite!
69. Assemble a better umbrella

Challenge students to engineer the best possible umbrella from various household supplies. Encourage them to plan, draw blueprints, and test their creations using the scientific method.
70. Create a rain cloud in a jar
Bring weather science indoors with this fun hands-on project. Use shaving cream to mimic clouds and add drops of food coloring to simulate rain. It’s a great way to explore the water cycle without even having to step outside!
71. Build a LEGO marble maze

Design and build a marble maze using LEGO bricks and a baseplate, arranging walls, pathways, and obstacles to guide a marble from start to finish. As students test and refine their designs, kids naturally engage in problem-solving, spatial reasoning, and creative engineering. This hands-on challenge is always a hit because students love seeing whether their marble can successfully navigate the twists and turns they’ve built.
72. Brighten up with rainbow celery
Make your science lesson more vibrant with a splash of color. Drop celery stalks into glasses of water with food dye, and watch as the beautiful colors travel up through the stems.
73. Safely view a solar eclipse

Is a solar eclipse coming your way? Teach your students about the solar eclipse, and help them safely view this exciting event with just a few simple materials.
Learn more: Solar Eclipse Viewer (Guide + Printable Reflection Sheet)
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