Morning Routine for Kids Free Printable
Print‑ready habit chart
Grab a sheet of A4 paper, draw a simple grid (morning, afternoon, evening) and label each row with the tasks you want your child to master: make the bed, brush teeth, wash face, pack school bag, grab a snack. Keep the font big enough for little hands to read. Save the file as a PDF and print as many copies as you need—one per week works well.
Turn chores into check‑off habits
Open the Trider habit tracker on your phone, tap the “+” button, and create a habit called “Make Bed.” Choose the “Check‑off” type so your kid just taps the card when the job’s done. Set the recurrence to “daily” and pick a bright blue color; the visual cue helps the habit stick. When the habit appears on the dashboard, it mirrors the boxes on your printable chart, so the child can see progress both on paper and on the screen.
Add a timer for brushing
Kids love a timer that counts down. In Trider, add a “Timer habit” named “Brush Teeth – 2 min.” Start the built‑in Pomodoro timer each morning; the app won’t mark the habit complete until the timer finishes. This tiny tech trick turns a routine into a game: the countdown beeps, the child feels a sense of accomplishment, and the check‑off appears automatically.
Use the journal for reflection
After the morning rush, open the journal (the notebook icon on the dashboard) and jot a one‑sentence note: “Today felt rushed, but we got everything done.” The mood emoji lets your child label how they felt—happy, sleepy, or a little stressed. Over weeks, the “On This Day” memory feature will surface past entries, showing patterns you both can discuss without digging through stacks of paper.
Create a squad for accountability
If you have a partner, a grandparent, or a neighbor who also wants to help, set up a small squad in the Social tab. Invite them with the squad code and let each member see the child’s completion percentage. A quick chat message—“Great job on the breakfast prep!”—adds social reinforcement without extra paperwork.
Add a micro‑activity for crisis mornings
Some days the alarm doesn’t go off, the weather’s terrible, and motivation is low. Tap the brain icon on the dashboard to enter Crisis Mode. The app swaps the full habit list for three bite‑size actions: a 30‑second breathing exercise, a vent‑journal prompt, and a tiny win like “Put shoes on.” Even on a rough morning, those three steps protect the streak and keep the day moving.