The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (2024)

Under $20

The gift of print

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (1)

Illustoria

Each issue of this print magazine focuses on a theme, such as humor and rain forests.

Buying Options

$16 from Illustoria(single issue)

$40 from McSweeney's(three issues)

Kazoo

This children’s magazine features stories, comics, and profiles about girls and women.

Buying Options

Buy from Kazoo

Illustoria and Kazoo are beautifully produced print magazines that invite young readers to revisit their arresting pages over and over again. Illustoria (a collaboration between McSweeney’s and The International Alliance of Youth Writing Centers) is a visual feast, with a focus on storytelling through art and literature. In addition to crafts and art projects, Illustoria presents stories through comics and profiles illustrators, artists, and makers.

The cover of the award-winning Kazoo trumpets that it’s “a magazine for girls.” This strikes us as unnecessarily prescriptive, since themes like “Steampunk” and “Magnificent Mistakes”—as well as delightful stories, project ideas, and activities—could appeal to young readers of any gender. (We used to also recommend Bravery, which is devoted to female role models, but it is no longer publishing new issues; you may be able to find it in a local library.) These publications are bursting with creative ideas and inspiration, and they weave messages of compassion and inclusivity into their content.

—Winnie Yang

Mini waffles

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Dash Mini Waffle Maker

Available in several fun shapes and patterns, this mini appliance churns out light, crisp waffles.

Buying Options

$13 from Amazon

$13 from Sur La Table

$9 from Target

Many 9-year-olds are ready to make breakfast on their own—for themselves or even the entire family. The easy-to-use Dash Mini Waffle Maker invites them to prepare small, yummy waffles one at a time. One of our favorite kitchen tools for kids, this little appliance is available in several styles, so your kid can make waffles in the standard criss-cross pattern as well as in the shape of a heart or with a pineapple imprint. Bonus: Cleaning is easy with a wipe-down.

—Ellen Lee

A passport to natural wonders

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Passport To Your National Parks

This booklet serves as a National Parks travelog with color-coded maps, information about parks, and plenty of space for stickers and stamps.

Buying Options

$13 from America's National Parks

The National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Annual Pass

Kids under 15 get in free to all national parks, but this annual pass covers entrance for accompanying adults.

Buying Options

$80 from REI

$80 from USGS Store

Kids under 15 should be granted free admission to national parks and federal recreation sites, and fourth-grade students can get a free pass for themselves and their families through the Every Kid Outdoors initiative. That year of free admission can be a nice impetus to planning various outdoor adventures, whether it’s an ambitious family journey or a local day trip. The individual passport is a fun add-on for kids. The little booklet is divided by region, with space for cancellations and stamps collected along the way. For those who are predisposed to collecting, the passport may help serve as motivation for planning even more park visits. And the booklet ultimately serves as both memento and diary, which just may start a habit of documenting a lifetime of exploration.

And note: If a child or other family member has a disability, they are eligible for a special access pass that grants them (and anyone else in the car) free lifetime admission to over 2,000 national parks. Keep in mind that the pass needs to be applied for weeks, if not months, in advance of the visit. Additionally, there are many excellent blogs and guides focused on accessible travel (surprisingly, the Statue of Liberty often tops disabled travelers’ lists of national parks with good accessibility options). These guides are also handy if you plan to travel with aging grandparents.

—Winnie Yang

A lovable stuffed animal

Moosh-Moosh Plushie

These adorable bolsters make excellent cuddle buddies.

Buying Options

$20 from Moosh Moosh

Even older kids appreciate next-level cuddling. Soft, squishy, and infinitely huggable, these plush animals deliver on snuggles. We fell for King Leo the Lion, which was part of an earlier series and is now sold out. But there are more characters to choose from in the more-recent series, such as Ana the Pineapple, a cute octopus, and Nebula the Unicorn. Plump and inviting, Moosh-Moosh plush buddies are comforting companions for, say, watching a movie on the couch. But they’re also wonderful at bedtime. My kid was delighted that he could use his new friend as a small, cushiony pillow.

—Ingrid Skjong

Fidgety jewels

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MindYourBiz Fidget Ring Set

These three rings have tiny, colorful beads that your 9-year-old will love to, well, fidget with.

Buying Options

$15 from Etsy

I’ve battled with anxiety and nervous habits, like nail-biting, since childhood. My children inherited some of these behaviors. We’ve tried fidget spinners and pops to cope, but they were too distracting. I’ve found these fidget rings to be discreet, practical, and fashionable. Each ring in this set of three is handmade with an adjustable 18-gauge wire band of either gold, silver, rose gold, copper, antique copper, or bronze. Five colorful, 3-millimeter beads are looped on the wire. Bonus: They don’t make any noise and can adjust to feel comfortable on most finger sizes. If you’re looking for a more traditional item for fidgeting, this custom 3D-printed fidget ring spins smoothly and quickly (I’ve found it helpful in an absent-minded or reflective movement). But it’s pricier, bulkier, and made of plastic.

A. Rochaun Meadows-Fernandez

Family pursuit

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Trivial Pursuit Family Edition

The family version of this classic game brings everyone into the fun, with questions for both kids and adults.

Buying Options

$17 from Amazon

When it comes to board games, the creative, innovative options are practically endless. And Wirecutter has multiple detailed guides to help you navigate them, including our guide to the best board games and board games we love for kids and families. But sometimes, nothing hits the spot like a tried-and-true classic. Trivial Pursuit Family Edition, for one, has managed to pass my household’s ultimate test: the tri-generation game night. Like the original version, this edition requires players to travel around the board, answering questions on a variety of topics and earning different-color pie pieces along the way. But the Family Edition has made some clever, peace-keeping tweaks. There are two decks of question cards, one for adults and one for kids, with corresponding levels of difficulty. (Don’t worry: The junior questions aren’t total giveaways.) And the rules have been adjusted to speed up and shorten the proceedings, resulting in less interminable rolling, fewer sagging moments, and—in our experience—more chipper attitudes (across all ages) when the winner is crowned.

A personalized puzzle

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Shutterfly Upload Your Own Design Puzzle

Shutterfly’s custom photo jigsaw puzzles can be made in four sizes, from 60 pieces to more than a thousand.

Buying Options

Buy from Shutterfly

Young puzzle lovers are likely to be delighted by Shutterfly’s personalized jigsaw puzzles. Shutterfly will print any digital photo on a high-quality board. The 252-piece version seems particularly fitting for a budding puzzle aficionado (the puzzles come in four sizes, including a 1,014-piece challenge for serious jigsaw showdowns). You can squeeze up to 17 different photos into one puzzle, and you may choose from dozens of templates and frames to get just the look you’re after. I gave my parents one of these a few years ago, using a group photo of our extended family. They were only mildly interested, but my nieces and nephews could hardly wait to piece together and disassemble their family’s faces every time we reunited. A personalized puzzle could also make a nice gift for your child to give to a friend, or it could be a thoughtful way for your kid to remember family members they too rarely see in person.

—Caitlin Giddings

$20 to $50

A thoughtful craft


Friendly Loom 7″ Potholder Loom Kit

This high-quality craft kit lets a kid weave two small potholders, and it can be reused repeatedly with the purchase of refill loops.

Buying Options

$20 from Amazon

Friendly Loom 10″ Potholder Loom Kit

Crafting on this larger loom takes a bit more patience and skill. But you end up with bigger, more-useful potholders, and it allows for more-intricate designs.

Buying Options

$33 from Amazon

Woven potholders are a classic craft, and they haven’t changed much across generations. I made this type of practical cotton craft when I was in grade school, and both of my boys have brought them home to me from summer camp or afterschool programs. New Hampshire company Friendly Loom makes an especially nice do-it-yourself kit. The frame is a sturdy green metal; the loops, made from recycled cotton, come in 12 bright colors. You use a long metal weaving hook to thread the loops across the grid, and there’s a smaller crochet hook to finish off the edges (here’s a helpful YouTube tutorial). One box comes with the supplies to make two small potholders, though you can buy refill bags with enough loops to make six more (and keep going from there). Friendly Loom also has a kit to make a larger, 10-inch potholder, which is likely a better size if you do plan to use these to move things in and out of your oven. This gift may be for a kid, but I like that it also gives them an opportunity to be a gift-giver and to feel satisfied with their effort as well as their generosity.

—Kalee Thompson

Champion-level bakeware

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (18)

Ateco Plain Edge Snowflake Cutter Set

These sturdy cookie cutters come in half a dozen shapes and produce well-defined edges.

Buying Options

$35 from Amazon

May be out of stock

$15 from Webstaurant Store

Ateco 14-Piece Cake Decorating Set

This set includes 12 piping tips that can add flourishes, from fine lines to voluminous rosettes.

Buying Options

$15 from Amazon

AmeriColor Student Soft Gel Paste Food Color

More concentrated than regular liquid food coloring, this gel produces longer-lasting, livelier hues.

Buying Options

$32 from Amazon

India Tree Nature’s Colors Decorating Set

The red, blue, and yellow dyes in this set are produced from beet, red cabbage, and turmeric.

Buying Options

$2,014 from Amazon

Inspired by shows like the Food Network’s Kids Baking Championship, my kids and their friends like to get together and challenge one another to bake-offs and cook-offs. (The best part? I often get to be the judge.) Wirecutter has tons of recommendations for gear to help you win any bake-off, the best holiday cookie-baking equipment, and the best tools for cooking with kids, but for an aspiring kid baker, a few particular items caught our eye. Among the holiday-themed cookie cutters we tested, those in the Ateco 5-Piece Stainless Steel Snowflake Cutter Set were the toughest, and they created the most well-defined cookie shapes. Kids who want to level up their cookie- and cake-decorating skills will appreciate the Ateco 14-Piece Cake Decorating Set, which has sturdy, reliable tips for making stars, rosettes, and other accents. Kids can also imbue their creations with brilliant color, using the AmeriColor Student Soft Gel Paste Food Color Kit. This food coloring is much more concentrated than the liquidy kind sold at grocery stores, so it lasts longer and produces more-vibrant hues, including a true red. (If you’re concerned about red food dye, this food-based India Tree Nature’s Colors Decorating Set is a good alternative.)

—Ellen Lee

Dominoes with friends

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Kingdomino

In this fast-paced version of dominoes, players build a kingdom by matching tiles representing different types of terrain.

Buying Options

$18 from Amazon

Kingdomino, a novel take on dominoes, is a fun strategy game for kids to play with friends or at a family game night. (It’s a favorite in Wirecutter’s guide to the best board games for kids.) Players select tiles that show different terrains (water, forest, fields) and align them to create a kingdom grid. The rules are few and fairly simple: A tile must connect to another tile with the same terrain type, and the grid must remain a certain size. But the quick pace, the dynamic game structure (the order in which players select new tiles constantly changes), and the need for complex decision-making make this game a challenging puzzle.

—Courtney Schley

A strategic puzzle game

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (25)

Blokus

This geometric game is easy to learn, but it becomes increasingly challenging as the board fills up with colorful, Tetris-style pieces.

Buying Options

$20 from Target

$1,999 from Amazon

Blokus is a puzzle-like geometric board game for two to four players, and it’s easy to learn (there’s only one rule). It starts off simple but gets devilishly more difficult after the first few moves, so it’s a great activity for 9-year-olds who relish game-based challenges. Players must set their Tetris-shaped pieces adjacent tobut not touching any sides ofanother piece of the same color on a large gridded board. (The pieces can touch the sides of other colors, however.) Blokus gets increasingly challenging as the board fills with red, blue, green, and yellow tiles, and players try to trap one another in corners. After the first few games, my daughter learned to plan ahead strategically so she could squeeze in the last remaining pieces for a well-earned victory. Lisa Regalla, former head of onsite and digital experiences at the Bay Area Discovery Museum, in Sausalito, California, recommends Blokus. Regalla said this is a fun game that also helps develop spatial reasoning skills, though it may not be appropriate for kids who get easily frustrated while handling tiny pieces.

—Ellen Lee

Get popping

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (27)

Presto PopLite

This fool-proof popcorn maker can produce a bucket’s worth in minutes.

Buying Options

$30 from Amazon

$30 from Home Depot

The Presto Poplite machine, which has been among the most-used appliances in my kitchen for the past several years, was not originally purchased as a gift for a third-grader. I initially bought this as a high school graduation gift, thinking it would make a fun dorm-room extra. When it suffered a severe (and rare!) shipping delay, I instead added it to the pile of presents for my family’s holiday Yankee swap. Then my own kid messed up the adult/kid Yankee swap gift ratio by stealing the popper away during a heated final round. It’s hard to imagine that anyone else could love it more. My son, now 9, can make his own fluffy, buttered popcorn after school with little mess and no risk of burning. (Wirecutter’s own popcorn experts have declared it one of the best ways to make popcorn.) You do need to be sure not to overload this machine, and I’ve found that it’s more effective to just melt your butter in the microwave, versus using the little plastic cup. When friends come over for movie night, we pour on the butter and fill up these retro popcorn boxes.

Kalee Thompson

Nature watch

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Lego Creator 3in1 Birdhouse 31143

This 500-piece set can transform from a birdhouse to a beehive to a park bench for a squirrel and hedgehog.

Buying Options

$37 from Amazon

$30 from Lego

The only problem with Lego’s versatile 3-in-1 sets is that many kids—my child among them—may not want to take apart their creation to make a new one. That said, the fun, animal-inspired possibilities in this Lego Creator 3in1 Birdhouse may be so appealing that kids won’t be able to resist building, tearing down, and building again. One of our favorite Lego sets for kids, it can be made into a birdhouse with six little birds, a beehive with bees and a honeycomb, or a park bench for a squirrel and hedgehog.

Ellen Lee

Animal planet

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (31)

Planet

This beautifully illustrated, three-dimensional strategy game inspires conversations about animals, the environment, and climate.

Buying Options

$33 from Amazon

A gorgeous strategy game that encourages environmental consciousness, Planet lets kids build a thriving ecosystem from a blank slate—a 12-sided, three-dimensional one. Players take turns adding magnetic tiles of terrain (forests, oceans, mountains) to their planet. Based on their terrain, they also compete to collect animal cards. The player who has the most desert terrain, for instance, wins the snake card. “It gets you thinking about the animals and their habitats,” said Brian Mayer, a gaming, learning, and library specialist in New York, who recommended the game. It’s also featured in our guide to board games for kids.

—Ellen Lee

A glow-in-the-dark flying disc

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (33)

Nite Ize Flashflight Light Up Flying Disc

This cool flying disc has LED lights, so you can keep tossing it long into the evening.

Buying Options

$20 from Amazon

Nine-year-olds may already have a favorite athletic activity, whether it’s baseball, soccer, or dance. But don’t underestimate the low-key group fun of tossing around a flying disc. Kids don’t need any extra equipment to play, and the game is as enjoyable with one friend as with 10. You may already have a Frisbee (or several), but we think it’s worth spending a little more to get a disc that tosses and glides with ease. The Nite Ize Flashflight is a favorite because it balances itself in flight and lights up with seemingly indestructible LED lights. The latter feature lets kids keep playing even in winter, when end early, as well as on warm summer nights. After some 30 hours researching and testing, we also found the Discraft Ultra-Star 175 to be an excellent, smooth-flying disc (and it’s one of our favorite beach and pool toys).

—Courtney Schley

A high-flying, no-nonsense kite

Delta Kite

This beginner-friendly kite can catch even the slightest breeze.

Buying Options

$25 from Amazon

Every year, Austin, Texas, holds the ABC Kite Fest—a massive family event that draws kite fliers from all over the world to launch their colorful, handmade creations into the air above Zilker Park. Inspired, but admittedly a kite rookie, I researched “easiest kites to fly” before we took to the skies with this one. As it turns out, a small- or medium-size Delta Kite is the most kid-friendly due to its overall simplicity, handling ease, ability to navigate a wide range of wind conditions, and steadying help from a tail. With very little effort (or wind assistance), even young kids can coax the kite into the air and control the reel while this kite dances around in a light breeze.

—Caitlin Giddings

A deliciously silly card game

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (36)

Throw Throw Burrito

When you’re playing this silly part-card, part-dodgeball game, be prepared to get hit by a foam burrito.

Buying Options

$25 from Amazon

I had my doubts about Throw Throw Burrito. (What? You pelt foam burritos at each other?) But even the biggest skeptics among us may dissolve into laughter when confronted with this quirky card game—because, really, why wouldn’t you want to ruthlessly pummel someone with a squishy fake burrito? The aim of the game (which is best played outside, where there’s no risk of breaking a glass with an errant toss) is to swap cards until you find a match or play a burrito card, leading to a back-to-back “burrito duel” or an all-out “burrito war.” Sharp reflexes are a must.

—Ellen Lee

Manga madness

This box set includes two story arcs of the beloved, long-running manga series featuring Pikachu and friends.

Buying Options

$49 from Amazon

Pokémon has somehow remained in the pop-culture zeitgeist for more than 20 years, which means I can share the same setting that I loved with my nephews (who are devotees). Pokémon Adventures is a long-running manga series that follows a story different from that of the cartoon. It’s broken up into three- to four-volume arcs, with a few arcs matching up to each generation of the game (if you don’t know what that means, ask the kid you’re buying for). The stories are fun and fast paced, and with 29 volumes in all (and more to come), the series offers fodder for future gifts, too. One detail to keep in mind: The boxed sets are written in the original Japanese orientation, so you read them back to front, right to left.

—Tim Barribeau

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Sew good

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (39)

Brother CS7000X

This sewing machine is beginner-friendly, but it also handles more-advanced projects with ease.

Buying Options

$240 from Amazon

After taking an introductory sewing class, my daughter was so inspired that she asked for a sewing machine of her own. For learners like her, we recommend the Brother CS7000X, the top pick in Wirecutter’s guide to the best sewing machines. This machine can handle a variety of fabrics and stitch them evenly. It also comes with plenty of speeds and specialized features (like presser feet), which beginners can use as they become more skilled and comfortable with the machine. If you don’t have a built-in mentor among your family or friends, consider including a sewing class or lessons (your local sewing-supply store likely offers both) to help kids get started, says DePaul University’s Conklin. “It sets them on a path to do more stuff on their own.”

Ellen Lee

Luxe loungewear

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (41)

Petite Plume Flannel Robe with Piping

This sophisticated flannel robe is cozy without being too bulky or hot.

Buying Options

$58 from Maisonette

$58 from Petite Plume

My son’s pajama game is pretty on point. Eager to follow in the slippered footsteps of his dad (who, ridiculously and semi-adorably, has amassed a sleepwear collection worthy of a sultan), our kid has developed a real taste for high-quality PJs. But until we found the Petite Plume Flannel Robe with Piping, he was still figuring out where bathrobes might fit into the mix. (He liked them in theory but found them bulky, hot, and annoying in practice.) The flannel of this cotton robe is on the thinner side, so it serves as a pleasant second layer without providing too much actual warmth. It ties easily and usually stays closed. And as is true of other Petite Plume items (our family has multiple pairs of its button-down PJ sets, in adult and kid versions), this robe’s fabric and construction are excellent and look like a million [insert the foreign currency of your choice here, to feel fancier]. The robe is available in several colors, such as green gingham, navy, and white; depending on the color, it comes in sizes from 6 months through 14 years. It can be monogrammed (and why not?) for an additional $10.

—Ingela Ratledge Amundson

A tricked-out two-wheeler

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (43)

Razor A3

This two-wheel scooter has fully rotating handlebars, front-wheel suspension, and big wheels that make it fast and great for tricks.

Buying Options

$52 from Amazon

$70 from Best Buy

For kids who are comfortable with the balance and lean of basic scootering, the sleek, two-wheeled Razor A3 can open the door to cool tricks and faster speeds. Two-wheeled scooters are much less stable than three-wheelers like the Micro Maxi Deluxe (both are recommended in our guide to the best scooters), but they’re easier to race fast. We compared several Razor scooters and found that the A3 had the speediest, most responsive ride and was the most fun—our older kid testers were successfully executing tricks within half an hour of climbing aboard. The A3 has larger wheels than most scooters (125 millimeters in diameter), and the front wheel is equipped with shock-absorbing suspension. The super-durable, aircraft-grade aluminum construction includes folding handlebars, a rear fender brake, and a wheelie bar for doing tricks.

—Kate Gammon

Weight for it

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (45)

Bearaby Nappling

This soft, kid-friendly weighted throw blanket is soothing and cozy.

Buying Options

$139 from Bearaby

On family movie nights, my son and I used to be in constant competition over who would be the first to claim the best throw blanket in the house—a fuzzy mauve monstrosity (which we bought ages ago at Anthropologie) that looks as if it’s made from the pelts of Muppets. But ever since he got his very own Bearaby Nappling Weighted Blanket, I’ve been nursing a serious case of blanket envy from my end of the sofa. A scaled-down, kid-size version of a pick in our guide to the best weighted blankets, the Nappling comes in five colors (midnight blue, moonstone gray, evening rose, olive night, and confetti, pictured above) and two weights (6 pounds and 8 pounds). (The rule of thumb is that a weighted blanket should be about 10% of your child’s body weight, but if your kid is under 5 years old or weighs less than 50 pounds, for safety reasons we recommend going with the Sommerfly Sleep Tight Weighted Blanket instead.) The Nappling is made from loosely woven organic cotton that feels cool to the touch and, yes, heavy—but reassuringly so, not in a panic-inducing way. (I know this from all the naps I’ve taken beneath it while my son was at school.) Most kids over the age of 7 should be okay to sleep with a weighted blanket through the night (my son does). Since the Nappling doesn’t offer a ton of actual warmth, though, it’s used in addition to, rather than instead of, his other bedding.

—Ingela Ratledge Amundson

A no-kidding set of paints

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (47)

Arteza Acrylic Premium Artist Paint (set of 60)

These acrylic paints produce vibrant hues, dry quickly, and can be applied to wood, glass, paper, or canvas.

Buying Options

$43 from Amazon

My daughter’s favorite birthday gift when she turned 9 was this elaborate set of acrylic paints, which comes with 60 tubes of vibrant colors—plenty for any budding artist. These paints dry quickly, and they can be used on wood and glass, in addition to paper and canvas (my daughter painted an old Mason jar to hold knickknacks). They come in handy for school projects as well as for ones that are just for fun. The paints feel more grown-up and professional than my daughter’s previous set of generic art supplies. So I hope this set will inspire her to continue to explore her interest in art.

—Ellen Lee

A Lego set built to play

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (49)

Lego Iconic Chess Set

With this Lego set, kids can build their own fully functional chessboard and pieces.

Buying Options

$65 from Lego

May be out of stock

$95 from Amazon

For a kid who is already into Lego, the Lego Iconic Chess Set can be a fun introduction to the game of chess. My son received this as a holiday gift when he was 10 (the set is officially rated for ages 9 and up). He constructed it in one sitting on a dreary winter afternoon, and various family members have been playing with it ever since. The build itself is, not surprisingly, somewhat monotonous. But the end result is a striking and functional game, with a board that doubles as a storage compartment for the chess pieces. A bonus feature: The Lego pieces attach to a small stud on each square, so if someone jostles the board—or you need to set it aside mid-game to save it for later—everything stays put. The set also comes with little red and blue Lego disks, which allow you to play checkers on the same board.

—Kalee Thompson

A family membership to a natural history museum

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (51)

American Museum of Natural History Family Membership

Memberships to local museums give families access to exhibits and programming—an excellent activity for hot or rainy days.

Buying Options

Buy from American Museum of Natural History

When my son was 9, he received a membership to New York City’s American Museum of Natural History for his birthday, and it ultimately became a treasured gift for our entire family. Beyond the incredible learning opportunities it offered my son, the membership gave us many easy yet meaningful family outings. Memberships to local museums (as well as botanical gardens, zoos, and other local institutions) include access to special exhibits, and they also provide extra encouragement to visit more frequently. They also help take the pressure off of trying to see everything in one trip: Sometimes spending a half-hour or an hour at a favorite exhibit is just the ticket.

—Blaine North

We love finding gifts that are unusual, thoughtful, and well vetted. See even more gift ideas we recommend.

—Additional reporting by Julie Kim

This article was edited by Kalee Thompson.

The 25 Best Gifts for 9-Year-Olds (2024)

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