Your child doesn’t have to be unprepared for life. Equip them for adulthood. Here are 100 Life Skills to Teach Your Child.

Many people are surprised when I tell them I went to live on my own in Europe at the age of seventeen. I don’t think there was anything particularly special about me. I just think my parents prepared me well for adulthood. At that age, I was well equipped to book a plane ticket and navigate a foreign airport. I made my way across another continent using bus and train schedules in multiple foreign languages – completely on my own. I’m not bragging – at least not about me. If any credit is due, it goes to my parents. Not only did they homeschool me, but they managed to teach me how to not need them.
My parents have never bought me a car. I’ve never borrowed money from them. I paid for college, my wedding and house without their help. If you’ve done a good job as a parent, your children won’t need a lot from you as adults.
Good parenting is working yourself out of a job
This isn’t a lecture for parents. It’s a reminder. It’s so much easier sometimes to just do things ourselves to get it done faster, but we do our “babies” a disservice. They lose out on life lessons. Today, I’m sharing 100 life skills to teach your children.
Include Them
As I wrote the list, I tried to think of all the things my parents taught me. I am one of three children, but I am the only girl. Our gender did not matter when it came to teaching life skills. My brothers were taught homemaking skills like cooking, ironing clothes, and how to properly clean. As a girl, I was taught how to change a tire, start a campfire, and basic survival skills. We all learned the same life skills.
The simplest way to to teach these skills is summed up in one word: inclusion. My mom loved to repaint rooms every so often. It was the cheapest way for her to redecorate. But one thing I remember is her including us. Instead of sitting us in front of a television to get us out of her way, she handed us a paint brush. She taught us how to open and store the paint and how to stir it. How to mask the trim and paint around corners. She taught us how to properly load the brush and rollers with paint. She’d show us how paint without streaks or splattering. I was able to fix up my first apartment thanks to the skills she showed me. “Everyone has four walls to work with. It’s what you do with them,” she used to say.
As a parent myself, I know tempting it is to brush the kids out of your way so you can get things done. But the best way to teach your children is by simply including them in your everyday activities. Paying for a check at a restaurant? Make them calculate a tip. Washing your car? Give them a sponge and put them to work. At the doctors office? Make your teen fill out their own forms.
Age Appropriateness
The list I provide, is for all age groups. Obviously there are things on the list that should be taught at an older age because of the dangers associated with them – like using a knife or learning to safely make a campfire. However, don’t underestimate introducing things at an early age. Introducing simply starts by talking and teaching your child why we do something a certain way.
Introducing also includes knowing they won’t likely master something until an older age. For example, when my son turned three, I started to include him on cleaning. I let him dry plastic dishes I’ve washed. I make him take his folded clothes upstairs to his room and make him scrub the toilet (I apply the chemicals and he swirls it around). Now four, he has chores every week. I know these things won’t be done perfectly. In fact, they may even create more work for me right now, but this instruction is about creating a habit in your child. It’s also about giving them responsibility, purpose, and sense of accomplishment. Young children especially love to help – so let them!
As a kid, when we went camping, my dad would first give us small unimportant tasks like bringing him the tent poles or gathering wood or kindling. As we grew older, so did our responsibility until finally we were capable of doing it entirely by ourselves.
100 Life Skills to Teach Your Child
- How to sew a button
- How to hem pants
- How to thread a needle
- How to use a sewing machine
- How to wash clothes
- How to bake a chicken
- How to cut up a whole chicken
- How to mow the grass
- How to file taxes
- How to balance a checkbook
- How to fill out a medical form
- How to buy a car
- How to bake a turkey
- How to stain a fence or deck
- How to wash a car
- How to change a tire
- How to check car fluids
- How to change a brake light
- How to get a state inspection sticker
- How to change a car windshield wiper blades
- How to repair a leaky faucet
- How to fix a running toilet
- How to organize a pantry
- How to crochet
- How to knit
- How to bake a cake from scatch
- How to clean a toilet
- How to descale a shower and shower head
- How to vacuum
- How to make a candle
- How to make soap
- How to start a fireplace fire
- How to build a campfire
- How to set up a tent
- How to fish
- How to swim
- How to change a baby’s diaper
- How to feed a baby
- How to bake bread
- How to use a fire extinguisher
- How to mail a letter
- How to play an instrument
- How to frame and hang a picture
- How to use a compass
- Basic etiquette
- How to use a drill
- How to clean a grill
- How to bake cookies
- How to preform the Heimlich maneuver
- How to perform CPR
- How to fold clothes
- How to iron clothes
- How to vacuum a swimming pool
- How to trim trees
- How to pull weeds
- How to mulch a flower bed
- How to paint a room
- How to save money
- How to calculate a sale price
- How to raise chickens
- How to navigate an airport
- Emergency preparedness
- How to mop a floor
- How to can food
- How to unclog a sink or toilet
- How to use a stand mixer
- How to chop vegetables / food
- How to check if food is ripe
- Basic first aid (dress a wound, apply pressure)
- How to read a map
- How to read a nutrition label
- How to pump gas
- How to write a resume
- How to apply for a job
- Critical thinking / logic
- How to set a budget
- How to BBQ food
- How to make basic meals
- How to check your credit score
- How to invest money
- How to calculate a tip
- How to write a thank you letter
- How to vote
- Basic politics and civics
- How to win and lose graciously
- How to apologize and ask for forgiveness
- How to set up electronics
- How to shampoo carpet
- How to use a camera (not a camera phone)
- Basic woodworking
- How to get to common places in your neighborhood
- How to polish furniture
- How to get a loan
- How to fix your credit
- How to filter water (survival skill)
- How to build a shelter
- How to meal plan
- How to shave properly
- How to pray
- How to carry on family traditions
I hope you’ve enjoyed this post, 100 Life Skills to Teach Your Child. Thanks for reading. Don’t forget to pin this post for later and subscribe to get FREE printables every month!