Age Appropriate Chores for Kids: A Realistic Guide by Age
Working out what age appropriate chores for kids look like is one of those things most parents underestimate in both directions. They either expect too little — doing tasks for children who are fully capable — or assign tasks that are genuinely too complex and then wonder why they’re not done properly.
Here’s a realistic breakdown by age, with the principle behind each stage.
Ages 5-6: Building the Habit
At five and six, children are capable of more than they’re often given credit for. The tasks won’t be done perfectly. That’s expected and fine — the goal at this age is the habit of contributing, not the quality of the output.
Realistic chores for this age: making their bed (it won’t look great, and that’s okay), putting dirty clothes in the hamper, setting the table with help, clearing their own plate after meals, picking up toys before bed, and helping feed a pet with supervision.
Keep instructions simple and specific. “Put your shoes in the shoe cupboard” rather than “tidy up your things.” At this age, vague instructions produce inaction, not because of unwillingness but because the child genuinely doesn’t know where to start.
Ages 7-8: Expanding Ownership
By seven and eight, children can handle more complex tasks and start to own them independently. The adult’s role shifts from directing every step to checking in at the end.
Realistic chores: making their bed independently, tidying their room, unloading the dishwasher, helping with meal prep (washing vegetables, stirring, setting out ingredients), sweeping or vacuuming a room, taking out rubbish bins, and watering plants.
At this age, children benefit from having a small number of chores that are reliably theirs each week. Ownership matters — “that’s your job” is more motivating than a rotating list they don’t feel connected to.
Ages 9-10: Real Contribution
Nine and ten-year-olds can make a genuine, meaningful contribution to how the household runs. This is the age where chores can move from “helping” into actual responsibility.
Realistic chores: loading and unloading the dishwasher, cleaning their own room properly (not just tidying), vacuuming common areas, helping prepare simple meals, doing their own laundry with guidance, cleaning a bathroom with instruction, mowing lawn with supervision, and packing their own school lunch.
The key at this age is explaining why — not lecturing, but genuinely connecting the task to the household. “When the laundry doesn’t get done, nobody has clean clothes” is a real-world consequence that a nine-year-old can grasp.
Ages 11-12: Near-Adult Capability
Upper primary school children can manage most household tasks independently. The main limiting factor is usually habit and expectation, not capability.
Realistic chores: doing their own laundry start to finish, cooking simple meals for the family, cleaning bathrooms independently, grocery shopping with a list, mowing and gardening, managing their own school organisation, and cleaning the kitchen after cooking.
At this age, reduce the micromanagement. Assign the responsibility and hold the expectation, but trust them to execute. Hovering undermines the sense of ownership that makes chores feel meaningful rather than controlled.
The Principle Underneath All of It
At every age, the goal is the same: a child who gradually understands that contributing to the household is part of being in it. Not as a burden, not as punishment, but as a normal part of how things work. That understanding is built through consistent expectation, not through lectures about responsibility.
Your Practical Takeaway
Look at what your child is currently doing around the house. Then look at this guide for their age. If there’s a gap — things they’re capable of but aren’t doing — pick one to introduce this week. Just one. Start small, hold the expectation, and add from there.