Young children develop mathematical thinking through counting, pattern recognition, shape exploration, measurement, sorting, and spatial reasoning, all of which can be embedded in everyday play.
The best maths activities for toddlers use everyday objects, simple games, and sensory play to build number sense, shape recognition, counting skills, and early problem-solving. All without a worksheet or calculator in sight. foundations your child will carry all the way to school and beyond.
Let’s get into 15 fun math activities where children can learn and enjoy at the same time.
This one is a winner because it combines the tactile satisfaction of handling rocks with the magic of numbers. Write numerals 1 to 10 on the rocks (or get your toddler to help with dots), then line them up and count together. Older toddlers can arrange them in order, while younger ones simply enjoy handling the rocks and hearing you count aloud.
Roll small playdough balls and press them onto dots to represent each number. This is wonderfully multi-sensory, so that children are seeing the numeral, forming the quantity, and feeling the playdough all at once. The physical action of placing the balls reinforces the concept that "three" means three things, not just a symbol.
What you need is a muffin tin or sorting tray, a collection of small household objects like buttons, cotton balls, pasta shapes, and pebbles. Tip a collection of mixed objects onto the table and ask your toddler to sort them. The mathematical concept here is classification, and one of the foundational skills in early numeracy.
Send your toddler on a shape hunt. "Can you find something in our house that's a circle?" A clock. A plate. A wheel on a toy car. Each time they find one, they add a mark to their card. This activity works brilliantly in the garden too, like leaf shapes, flower shapes, and the rectangular path stones.
Cooking is one of the richest mathematical environments available to a young child. Measuring ingredients introduces the concept of volume. Counting spoonfuls introduces numbers. Following a recipe introduces sequencing. "First, we add flour, then we add sugar, then we add an egg" is a mathematics lesson dressed up as baking.
Draw a simple hopscotch grid on the footpath or driveway, numbered 1-6 (or 1–10 for older toddlers). Call out a number and let your toddler jump to it. Then hop together in order, counting as you go. Physical maths, where the body is involved in the learning, is particularly powerful for young children because it creates embodied mathematical memories.
Tip a pile of mixed pom-poms onto a tray and ask your toddler to sort them by colour into the ice cube tray sections or small bowls. Once sorted, count how many are in each group. "We have four red pom poms and six blue pom poms. Which group has more?"
Using tongs to transfer the pom poms adds a fine motor component and makes this activity feel like a genuine challenge rather than a task.
Lay out the number cards 1 to 5. For each card, build a tower with that many blocks. Ask your toddler: "Which tower is the tallest? Which is the shortest? Why is the number five tower the biggest?" This activity elegantly bridges number recognition with the concept of measurement, and more blocks means a taller tower, which means bigger is better.
Hide plastic numerals (or numbered cards in a zip-lock bag) inside a sensory bin filled with rice or sand. Give your toddler a scoop and ask them to dig for treasure. When they find a number, name it together and put it in order.
Thread beads in a simple repeating pattern like red, yellow, red, yellow, and ask your toddler to continue the pattern. Once they've mastered AB patterns, introduce ABC patterns (red, yellow, blue, red, yellow, blue). Pattern recognition is one of the core mathematical competencies developed in early childhood and directly supports algebraic thinking later in school. But to a three-year-old, it's just a bracelet.
Choose objects around the house, such as a book, a toy car, a shoe, and measure them using Duplo blocks lined up alongside. "How many blocks long is this book? How many blocks long is your shoe? Which one is longer?" Non-standard measurement (using blocks instead of a ruler) is developmentally appropriate for toddlers and introduces the mathematical concept of measurement through concrete, physical comparison.
Draw a circle on paper (the pizza base). Roll the die, count the dots, and add that many "toppings" to the pizza. Take turns. The first player to reach 10 toppings wins. This is one of the best early maths games because it develops the ability to recognise quantities at a glance without counting individually.
Take a walk around the block, through a park, along Beecroft's beautiful leafy streets or through a Cherrybrook reserve. Collecting natural objects as you go. Gather leaves, sticks, pebbles, seed pods, and flowers. When you get home, sort them by type, size, or colour. Count each group. Compare the longest stick to the shortest. Name the shapes of the leaves.
Roll the die. Find the matching dot card. Simple as that, but extraordinarily effective for building subitising skills. For older toddlers, add a step: roll two dice and count the total dots together.
You need a set of graduated cups or containers of varying sizes. This activity is best for measurement, sequencing, and comparative thinking.
Jumble up the cups and ask your toddler to arrange them from smallest to biggest, or nest them inside each other. This activity develops the concept of ordering objects along a dimension, which is a foundational mathematical concept directly related to number ordering later on.
The next time you count your child's fingers before bed, sort the washing by colour, or count the steps to the front door, know that you're doing exactly the right thing. You're embedding mathematical thinking into the fabric of everyday life, which is precisely where it needs to be embedded for toddlers.
And if you're looking for an early learning centre in Sydney that shares this play-based, intentional approach to mathematical development. And, a place where your child's numeracy is nurtured every day by qualified, passionate educators, Wonder Years is exactly that.
Book a tour at your nearest Wonder Years centre and watch early maths and so much more come to life.
At what age should I start teaching maths to my toddler?
Mathematical learning begins at birth through everyday interactions, such as hearing counting, experiencing quantity, and observing patterns. There’s no "too early" when maths is delivered through play.
How long should maths activities last for a toddler?
Follow your toddler's lead. Most activities work best in five to fifteen-minute windows, stop while they're still engaged, and never push past the point of interest. Frequent, brief, joyful sessions are far more effective than less frequent, longer, forced ones.
Do I need to buy special maths resources for my toddler?
Absolutely not. The best toddler maths activities use everyday household objects like muffin tins, wooden blocks, playdough, buttons, pebbles, measuring cups, and kitchen ingredients. The activities in this guide are all achievable with materials you almost certainly already have.
Does childcare help with early maths development?
Quality early learning centres that use intentional, play-based programming aligned with the EYLF embed numeracy learning throughout every day. Children in quality childcare settings show measurably stronger early mathematical skills than those without access to structured early learning environments.