Walking down the toy aisle (or browsing baby gear online) can feel overwhelming: There are seemingly endless baby toys vying for a spot in your cart. It can be difficult to narrow down what toys are actually best for your 1-year-old’s development, never mind which ones she’ll love playing with for months (or years) to come.
In general, the more a toy allows your 1-year-old to do, the better, explains Sarah Lytle, Ph.D., Director of Outreach and Education, Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences (I-LABS) at the University of Washington.
“Kids this age are trying to figure out the world and experiment with their senses,” Lytle says. Open-ended toys allow 1-year-olds to explore and express their creativity and practice fine motor skills, she adds. For example, a set of stacking cups can be nestled together, turned into blocks for building or used as pretend drinking cups.
Best types of toys for 1-year-olds
Here are some of the best types of 1-year-old toys you should consider for your child:
- Blocks. Babies love blocks to stack, bang together and build with.
- Puzzles. Doing puzzles helps encourage both your tot’s hand-eye coordination and visual perception skills. The best puzzles for 1-year-olds have large pieces.
- Balls. Colorful balls with nubs or other sensory features are a delight for baby, Lytle says. “Throwing and catching (or attempting to) works their gross motor skills and the back and forth interaction sets up their language skills as it parallels the back and forth of a conversation,” she says.
- Art materials. Encourage your child’s inner Picasso with thicker crayons and wide, non-toxic washable markers.
- Board books. Books with simple illustrations or photographs of real objects are best for 1-year-olds. “The more realistic the image is, the easier it is for a child this age to comprehend and relate it back to their own world,” Lytle says. A single picture with a single word naming it (versus lots of pictures and words or a story) will help your child grow his vocabulary.
Be sure to avoid anything with small pieces that could be a choking hazard, anything too loud that could potentially damage baby’s hearing and plastic toys that are flimsy and could break easily, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). As for screen time, the AAP recommends that parents limit children 18 months to video chats only (meaning no TV time and no interactive apps). And finally, remember that one of the most important parts of playtime is you as your little one’s caregiver. Toys shouldn’t replace one-on-one time with your child, but rather, enrichen it.
How we made the best picks for the best toys for 1-year-olds
To help us narrow down the best toys for 1-year-olds out of the many (many) options on the market, we asked three experts what features to look for: Lytle, Gina Posner, M.D., a board-certified pediatrician at MemorialCare Medical Group in Fountain Valley, California, and Kyle Monk, M.D., a board-certified pediatrician at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California.
One general rule of thumb? Usually, simple toys are the best. “Basic things are much more entertaining for kids,” Dr. Posner says. “Kids always seem to be attracted to things that are not quite as complex.” Oftentimes, that includes toys that crinkle and make noise, balls that roll and toys that make noise when your baby bangs it with a (toy) hammer.
Ready to start shopping? Below, check out some of the best toys for 1-year-olds.