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Summer Activities for Teenagers

Finding summer activities for teenagers is a particular kind of challenge. They’re old enough to dismiss a generic list of fifty things, and the long break has a way of disappearing into a screen before anyone’s made a plan.

This free tool gives you a shorter, sharper answer. Tell it what your teen is into, how much time you’ve got, and whether they lean active, social or creative, and it hands back a tailored set of ideas, sorted by category and built for them.

It takes about a minute, needs no sign-up, and you can save the ones you like and copy them all in one go.

What Should Your Teen Do This Summer? — Simirity
For parents

What Should Your Teen Do This Summer?

Real skills, proper challenges and creative projects, each with a free or low-cost place to start. Bookmark the ones you like and share them in a couple of taps.

The sort of thing you'd be glad to see them doing, and that they might enjoy.

How old are they?

13–14
Early teens
15–17
Older teens

What are they into?

Pick all that apply.

Anything to narrow it down?

Time
Any Quick A project
Budget
Open to paid Free only
Screen
Any Off-screen
Where
Any Indoors Outdoors
Company
Any Solo With friends

Ideas Worth Sharing

Your shortlist is ready

Your bookmarked ideas

    Take it further

    The last few summers go quickly

    Your teen has only a handful of summers like this one left before they leave home. Simirity is a private place to keep the family stories, photos and small moments these years are made of, somewhere they'll still have long after they've gone. Have a look around a live family account, no sign-up needed.

    Explore the demo →

    Before They're Grown

    The activities fill the weeks. What you do with them is the part worth thinking about, because your teenager only gets so many summers at home.

    The Vanishing Summer

    Your teenager's summer looks nothing like the one you had

    If your own summers meant roaming outside until someone called you in, you’re not imagining the change. The early twentieth century has been called a golden age of unstructured play, time children shaped for themselves.

    Since then that kind of play has largely given way to screens, and some estimates put a child’s unstructured outdoor play at minutes a day against hours of screen time. It matters more than it sounds, because open-ended time is where teenagers build imagination, resilience and the patience to sit with their own boredom.

    This isn’t about banning screens. It’s about nudging the balance back, and a bit of a plan makes that easier.

    A teenager on his summer holidays playing indoors on his phone

    A common scene, even when the sun shines

    The best summer activities for teenagers don't just fill time, but create precious memories they will treasure

    A summer where memories are made

    More Than a Holiday

    The best summers do more than pass the time

    A good summer is rarely about filling every hour. It’s the unplanned afternoons, the small challenges they meet without you hovering, and the odd shared adventure a teenager quietly files away. These are the years they start working out who they are, and what they do now shapes the adult they become.

    They’re also numbered. They’ve only a handful of summers left before they adulthood and responsibilities restrict their summer plans, which is what makes the coming summer so precious.

    Making Them Last

    Summer ends, but memories don't have to fade

    Here’s your chance to do something that outlasts the summer. The memories of your teen’s holidays will fade over time. A few photos will remain, but the stories, memories, feelings and thoughts will slip away.

    Simirity is a private family journal built to share and preserve family stories, in words, photos, videos and voice, shared only with the people you choose. It’s the natural home for the moments you don’t want to lose.

    And one day it won’t only be you looking back on these precious days; your teenager, now fully grown, will be glad these summers were saved.

    SIMIRITY FAMILY JOURNAL
    The Simirity family journal app - the home of family stories

    Simirity is a private home for family stories

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    FAQ — Summer Activities for Teenagers

    What are good summer activities for teenagers?

    The best summer activities for teenagers match their needs and character and can’t be listed in a generic list. That means balancing active, social and creative options, mixing free time with the odd planned outing, and leaning into what they’re actually curious about. The tool above does this for you. Answer three quick questions and it returns a tailored set of ideas, sorted by category, in about a minute.

    How do I keep my teenager entertained over the long summer holiday?

    Teenagers rarely want to be entertained. They want a bit of independence and the occasional thing worth showing up for. A loose plan works better than a packed schedule: a few activities they’ve helped choose, some unstructured time, and one or two things to look forward to. Enough to stop the whole break dissolving into a screen, without micromanaging it.

    What are some free or low-cost summer activities for teenagers?

    Plenty of the most memorable ones cost nothing. Hikes, swimming, learning a skill from a relative, cooking for the family, photography walks, or a self-set project. Local libraries, parks and community groups often run free events for teens over the summer too. Many of the activities for teenagers in the tool above cost little or nothing.

    How do I get my teenager off their phone during the summer?

    Outright bans tend to backfire. What works better is giving the screen some competition: activities with social pull, a challenge, or a clear payoff. Letting them help choose helps too, since something they picked is far easier to commit to than something imposed. The goal isn’t zero screens. It’s tilting the balance back towards doing and being together.

    How can I hold onto the memories from these summers?

    Photos help, but they scatter across phones and rarely get revisited. A family journal like Simirity is built to keep these moments on purpose, in words, photos and voice, in one private space shared only with the people you choose. It means the summers you spend together now will be there for you to reminisce about, and there for your teenager to look back on as an adult.