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Planning guide

Plan a kids party: from the first plan to the last goodie bag

A concrete guide for parents who want to pull off a relaxed party with four to six weeks of lead time, without getting lost in the details.

In short

A successful kids party needs four to six weeks of lead time, a clear schedule across two to four hours, age-appropriate games, simple allergy-friendly food, and prepared goodie bags. Budget about 15 to 25 Euro per child and invite at most as many kids as the birthday child's age plus one.

A kids party rarely fails because of the parents, but because of the preparation. Anyone who starts four to six weeks before the date, putting the essentials into a simple order, will have almost no stress on the day itself. This guide describes what really counts: the scope, the schedule, the food, the games, and the goodbye with goodie bags. Notes on age-appropriate activities, allergy-friendly catering, and a realistic timeline are built in where they belong.

Set the scope and guest list early

Anyone who clarifies the date, duration, guest count, and budget at the start saves three quarters of the later decisions. These four points are the basis everything else is built around, from the shopping list to the game plan.

For the guest count, the "age plus one" rule has proven itself. So a seven-year-old invites eight children. That sounds like few, but with younger kids every additional guest means noticeably more noise, arguments, and supervision effort. With eight- to ten-year-olds you can go up to ten children; more quickly becomes hard to manage even in larger apartments.

For the budget, a relaxed party at home usually lands at 15 to 25 Euro per child, including food, cake, decor, and goodie bags. External venues such as indoor playgrounds, climbing halls, or pools tend to charge 25 to 45 Euro per child, but the cleanup disappears. For duration: two hours for three- to five-year-olds, three hours for six- to nine-year-olds, three to four hours from age ten. Longer parties almost always end with overtired, crying children. If you are also planning a classic family birthday with relatives, the guide on how to plan a birthday party offers a complementary structure.

Invitations and the allergy question

Invitations go out four weeks before the date and contain all the information parents need to say yes or no. That includes the date, start and end time, address, theme, notes on clothing, and a clear question about allergies or intolerances.

Written invitations, on paper or as a message, are more binding than verbal yeses in the schoolyard. Ask for an RSVP by two weeks ahead at the latest, otherwise you will still be guessing how much to buy while shopping the day before. When the reply comes in, note the parents' mobile number right away for emergencies.

The allergy question is not a detail but decisive for the food planning. Common topics are nut, dairy, egg, and gluten intolerances, plus vegetarian or halal diets. If a child has a peanut allergy, it is better to banish peanuts from the buffet entirely, because cross-contamination is hard to avoid. For the rest, clearly labeled alternatives are usually enough: lactose-free cake, a plate of gluten-free crackers, vegetarian wraps next to the sausages.

Schedule and age-appropriate games

A schedule in 15-minute blocks is the most important tool of a relaxed kids party. Children lose attention as soon as downtime appears, and downtime is the main cause of arguments, tears, and broken decor.

A typical three-hour plan for seven- to nine-year-olds looks like this: 15 minutes of arrival and free play, 30 minutes of an active game, 20 minutes of food, 45 minutes of a main activity like a treasure hunt or crafts, 20 minutes of cake and presents, 30 minutes of a calmer closing game or movie, 20 minutes of goodbye with goodie bags. Always plan one game more than you need, in case something finishes faster.

Games by age

For three- to five-year-olds, calm classics work best: musical games, stop-music dancing, sack races, a simple craft. For six- to nine-year-olds, a treasure hunt with clues, a sweet-eating contest, a piñata, an egg-and-spoon race, and easy quiz rounds are ideal. From age ten, escape-room tasks, baking contests, geocaching in the park, small movie afternoons, or themed workshops work well. Concrete ideas for classic games are also in the post on planning a kids birthday. If you pick a specific theme, such as detective, space, or unicorn, read the guide on planning a theme party as a companion, because a clear theme ties the invitation, decor, food, and games together.

Food, drinks, and goodie bags

Simple food almost always beats elaborate catering at kids parties. Children eat small portions, pick at a lot, and are full after the cake anyway, so warm buffets with five components are not worth it.

One or two main components work well, such as mini pizzas, sausages with rolls, or wraps, plus a fruit plate, veggie sticks with dip, pretzels, and a birthday cake. For catering, the rule is: finger food beats plates, water and diluted juice beat soda. Label allergy-friendly alternatives clearly with small signs, so the affected child does not have to ask separately. A lactose-free muffin next to the main cake looks unremarkable but is still inclusive.

Pack goodie bags the day before, filled identically and with a name sticker. Arguments arise when a child believes another got something better. Three to five small items under five Euro total per bag are enough: a piece of chocolate, a small toy, a sticker, a balloon. Skip loud whistles; parents reliably hate them.

Decor and safety on the day

Decor is atmosphere, not the main attraction, and should be possible to hang in 30 to 45 minutes. Three elements are enough: balloons, a garland or banner matching the theme, and a set table with matching napkins and plates.

If you pick a theme, keep the color palette to two or three tones, otherwise the room feels busy. Helium balloons are popular but expensive and short-lived; regular balloons on strings look just as festive. A craft corner with construction paper, pens, and stickers often doubles as decor and as an activity if a child arrives earlier than planned.

For safety: a first-aid kit within reach, the parents' emergency numbers on a note on the pinboard, peanuts and grapes left out for toddlers, stairs and outlets checked beforehand. If you celebrate outside, perhaps as a small summer party in the garden, the same rules apply as for organizing a BBQ party: the grill outside the play zone, sun protection for younger children, and plenty of water. Deliberately plan a calmer phase toward the end; a read-aloud moment or a short film helps lower the energy level before pickup. That way the children go home full, tired, and content, and you only have to roll up the bags in the evening.

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Step by step

  1. Set the scope and budget

    Decide on the date, time, guest count, and budget per child before planning further details.

  2. Send invitations four weeks out

    In writing, with date, time, end time, address, theme, and an allergy question for the parents.

  3. Build a schedule in 15-minute blocks

    Place arrival, games, food, the main activity, cake, and the goodbye round on a fixed timeline.

  4. Keep food and drinks simple

    Finger food, fruit, and one main cake, with clearly labeled allergy-friendly alternatives.

  5. Prepare games and decor

    Pick three to five games, lay out materials the day before, and hang decor that matches the theme.

  6. Pack goodie bags the day before

    One identical bag per child with small items under five Euro, plus name stickers to avoid arguments.

What you actually need

  • Invitations with an allergy question
  • Schedule in 15-minute blocks
  • Three to five age-appropriate games
  • Allergy-friendly snacks labeled
  • Decor matching the theme
  • Goodie bags filled identically
  • First-aid kit within reach
  • Parents' emergency numbers noted

Frequently asked questions

Set the date, guest count, and budget first, then send invitations with an allergy question four weeks out. Build a schedule in 15-minute blocks, plan three to five games, simple food, and goodie bags. Shop a week ahead, then decorate and pack the bags the day before.
Invitations, decor that matches the theme, food and drinks including allergy-friendly alternatives, materials for three to five games, one main activity, a cake with candles, goodie bags, and a first-aid kit. Trash bags, paper towels, a change of clothes for the birthday child, and the parents' emergency numbers are also handy.
For children between three and five, two hours is enough; from six to nine, three hours is ideal. From ten years up, three to four hours works well, and sleepovers run longer of course. Longer parties usually lead to overtiredness, arguments, and a difficult wind-down.
Classics like musical games, a sweet-eating contest, a treasure hunt, or a craft station work well. For older kids, escape-room tasks, baking, movie afternoons, or a trip to the pool go over well. Always plan one game more than you need, in case an activity finishes faster than expected.
A proven rule of thumb is the birthday child's age plus one. So a six-year-old invites seven children. More kids mean exponentially more arguments, noise, and supervision effort, which is why smaller groups almost always feel more relaxed.
For six to eight children, the total cost is usually between 80 and 200 Euro, so roughly 15 to 25 Euro per child. The main line items are food, cake, goodie bags, and decor. If you celebrate at an external venue, such as an indoor playground or pool, expect 25 to 45 Euro per child.

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Last updated: 24. June 2026