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Keeping Kids Entertained on Long RV Driving Days: Apps, Games and Road Trip Ideas

April 8, 20267 min readBy KamperHub Team
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The Reality of Long Driving Days With Kids

Let's be honest — not every day of an RV trip is a scenic two-hour cruise to a national park. Some days you need to cover 400 miles of interstate to get from A to B. And when you've got kids in the back seat, those days can feel approximately seventeen hours long.

The trick isn't finding one magic activity that keeps them quiet all day. It's having a rotation — screens, games, audio, snacks, and the occasional bribe. No judgment here. Screen time on a 6-hour driving day is survival, not bad parenting.

Here's what actually works, tested by families on the road.

Best Free Offline iPad Apps for Kids

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The golden rule: download everything before you leave areas with cell service. Once you're on a rural highway stretch, you might not get a signal for hours.

Khan Academy Kids (ages 2-8) — Reading, math, social-emotional skills. Completely free, no ads, no in-app purchases. Works fully offline once downloaded. This is the gold standard for educational screen time.

PBS Kids Games (ages 3-8) — Download games featuring Daniel Tiger, Curious George, Wild Kratts, and more. Free and works offline. Surprisingly good quality.

Toca Boca series (ages 3-9) — Toca Kitchen, Toca Life World, and others offer creative open-ended play. Some content is free, with optional paid packs. Kids can spend hours building their own worlds.

Endless Alphabet / Endless Reader (ages 3-7) — Vocabulary and word puzzles with hilarious monster animations. Download content packs for offline use.

Duolingo Kids (ages 3-6) — Language learning disguised as a game. Some offline capability. Great for older kids too with regular Duolingo.

LEGO apps (ages 4-10) — LEGO Builder and LEGO Duplo World have offline modes. Building instructions alone can keep a LEGO-obsessed kid busy for an hour.

Disney+ — Download movies and episodes for offline viewing. Load up before each driving day.

YouTube Premium — Yes, it's paid, but the ability to download videos for offline viewing is a game-changer on long trips. Download a playlist of their favorites before each driving day.

Pro tip: Create a "Travel Mode" folder on the iPad with just the offline-ready apps. That way the kids aren't trying to open things that need internet and getting frustrated.

Screen-Free Car Activities That Actually Work

Screens are great, but variety is the key to a peaceful car. Here are the non-screen options that families swear by.

Audiobooks and podcasts — This is the secret weapon. Try the kids' section on Audible, or these free podcasts: Story Pirates (comedy and stories), Wow in the World (science adventures from NPR), and Brains On (science questions answered). Pop them on the car speakers and the whole family gets into it.

Travel journals — Give each kid a notebook, a pack of markers, and some stickers. They draw what they saw today, stick in ticket stubs, press leaves, rate the campground. By the end of the trip you've got a brilliant keepsake.

Classic car games — The state license plate game (spot plates from all 50 states), animal spotting tallies, 20 questions, the alphabet game (find each letter in order on road signs), and the old favorite "I Spy."

Magnetic drawing boards — No mess, no lost pencils, endlessly reusable. Perfect for the 3-6 age group.

Sticker books and activity packs — Stock up at Dollar Tree or Target before the trip. A new sticker book every few driving days keeps it exciting.

Snack rotation — Never underestimate the power of snacks. A new snack every hour keeps morale high. Pre-pack snack bags the night before so you're not rummaging through the RV at highway speed.

Timing and Routine Tips

How you structure the day matters as much as what activities you bring.

Start early. A 6am departure means 1-2 hours of sleepy kids. That's free quiet time. Many families swear by getting the kids in the RV in their pajamas and letting them doze off.

Break every 2 hours. Not just gas station stops — find rest areas with picnic tables, playgrounds, or a grassy area to run around. Kids need to burn energy or the next stretch will be chaos.

Alternate activities. Try this rotation: 1 hour of screens, 1 hour of screen-free games, 1 hour of audiobooks/podcasts, then snack break. Repeat.

Create a "boredom box." A small container that lives in the back seat and only comes out on driving days. Fill it with activities, fidget toys, and surprises. The novelty of driving-day-only items keeps them interesting.

Planning Stops That Kids Actually Enjoy

The best way to survive long driving days is to break them up with stops that kids get excited about.

Build in playground stops. Search "playground" on Google Maps along your route. Many small towns have fantastic community parks that are worth a 20-minute detour.

Splash pads and swimming pools. On hot days, a 45-minute swim stop at a city pool or splash pad resets everyone's mood. Many are free or just a few dollars.

Junior Ranger programs. If you're passing near a National Park, stop at the visitor center and pick up a Junior Ranger activity book. They're free, educational, and kids earn a badge when they complete them. The National Park Service runs these at nearly every park.

Short nature trails. Kids love creek crossings, rock scrambles, and anything involving climbing. State parks with trails under a mile are perfect for a leg-stretch stop.

Quirky roadside attractions. The World's Largest Ball of Twine, dinosaur statues, odd museums — kids love this stuff and it breaks up the monotony.

Plan your route with [KamperHub](https://app.kamperhub.com/route-planner) and build in family-friendly stops along the way.

What Other Families Recommend

Tips from families who've done it:

"Download everything before you leave cell service — we learned that lesson the hard way in Wyoming." — Sarah, 6 months on the road with two under 7

"We do a lucky dip bag — wrapped dollar store toys, one per driving day. The unwrapping alone buys you 20 minutes." — Matt, cross-country RV trip with three kids

"Audiobooks changed our lives. The kids fight over what to listen to instead of fighting with each other." — Jen, full-time RV family

"Magnetic drawing boards. We've been through four of them. Best $8 I ever spent, over and over again." — Dave, grandparents RVing with grandkids

Make the Drive Part of the Adventure

The best trick is turning the driving itself into something worth paying attention to.

Wildlife spotting challenges. Create a checklist: deer, bison, coyote, eagle, prairie dog, elk, wild turkey. Tick them off as you spot them through the window. First to complete the list wins a prize (ice cream at the next town works well).

The state line countdown. Make a big deal of crossing state lines. Collect something from each state — a sticker, a postcard, a magnet. Kids love the milestone moments.

The license plate game. Keep a running list of all 50 states spotted on license plates. This one can last an entire road trip.

Let older kids navigate. Give them a paper map (yes, paper) and let them follow the route. It's educational, it's engaging, and it gives them a sense of responsibility.

Mile marker milestones. Celebrate every 100 miles or every state border. It gives the day a sense of progress.

Track your RV journey and stats with [KamperHub](https://app.kamperhub.com) — show the kids how far you've traveled and how many states you've visited.

The Essential Download Checklist

Before you leave your last service area, make sure you've downloaded:

  • [ ] iPad apps updated and content downloaded
  • [ ] Audiobook or podcast episodes saved offline
  • [ ] YouTube videos downloaded (if using Premium)
  • [ ] Disney+ episodes downloaded
  • [ ] Music playlists for offline play
  • [ ] Google Maps route downloaded for offline navigation

Prepare the night before each big driving day: charge devices, pack snack bags, fill water bottles, and load up the boredom box. A little prep goes a long way.


Long driving days are part of RV life — but they don't have to be miserable. With the right mix of screens, snacks, and creativity, you might even enjoy them. Occasionally.


Useful Resources

family travelkidsroad tripRV travelentertainment

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