🧽 Montessori Chores Guide: Ages 18 Months to 6 Years
Want to raise a confident, helpful child who enjoys contributing at home? Montessori chores aren't about giving your child work - they're about giving them purpose.
In Montessori homes, chores aren’t seen as tasks — they’re opportunities. From as early as 18 months, children are eager to contribute. When we invite them with the right tools, guidance, and patience, we build responsibility, independence, and joy in everyday living.
👶 Ages 18 Months – 3 Years: Tiny Hands, Big Help
At this stage, children learn through imitation. Chores should be simple, short, and joyful.
Chores for Toddlers (With Supervision):
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Wiping spills with a small clothes
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Putting clothes in the hamper
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Watering plants
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Brushing and feeding pets
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Carrying their plate to the sink
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Picking up toys and putting them in a basket
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Simple dusting
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Matching socks
Tools to Use:
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Small cleaning cloths
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Mini cleaning set (Toddler-sized broom, dustpan, spray bottle)
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Lightweight watering can
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Low shelves, hooks or baskets for access - for toy clean up
How to Introduce Chores:
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Invite, don’t force: “Would you like to help?”
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Use slow, clear demonstrations without rushing
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Repeat often — practice is learning
Let them explore without correcting every mistake
🧒 Ages 3 – 6 Years: Capable and Confident - Building Responsibility & Routine
Chores for Preschoolers:
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Making their bed
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Folding towels
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Setting the table
Wiping windows and counters
Brushing their hair
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Helping prepare & pack simple snacks or lunch
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Washing plastic dishes
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Feeding pets & caring for indoor plants
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Watering and sweeping outdoors
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Helping with laundry sorting by color
Montessori Tips:
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Rotate tasks to avoid boredom
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Offer choices: “Would you like to sweep or fold today?”
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Give them real tools scaled to size (wooden brooms, small aprons, etc.)
🪧 DIY Chore Charts (The Montessori Way)
Keep it simple and visual. You can:
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Create a picture-based chart (icons for non-readers)
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Use Velcro or magnets to move tasks to “done”
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Include daily and weekly chores they can manage independently
Keep visuals at their eye level
📌 Avoid sticker rewards or bribes — the goal is intrinsic motivation.
🎉 Making Chores Fun (Not a Fight)
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Play calm background music or sing while working (yes, even silly songs)
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Work together (especially at first)
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Praise the effort, not perfection - celebrate with high-five or a warm "You did it!"
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Allow room for mistakes — it’s part of learning
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Turn clean-up into a race or game when needed
Use gentle reminders, not bribes or punishments
Let your child choose the task sometimes
🌿 Why Chores Matter in Montessori
- Build fine motor skills
- Teach order and responsibility
- Create strong home connections
- Develop confidence and independence
💡 Final Thoughts
Montessori chores are less about control and more about trust — trust that your child is capable, eager, and worthy of real responsibility. With the right tools and environment, home care becomes part of learning.
🌿Coming Soon: Free printable chore charts and toddler tools list – join the mailing list to get yours!💛Follow @thehomelearningnest on all socials for updates.

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