Toddler Chore Chart Printable (Free 5-Page Pack for Ages 2 to 5)
Toddler chore chart printable — 5 pages built for ages 2-5: simple weekly grid, eight-job version, daily Big Three card, behavior helpers, and blank template.

This toddler chore chart printable is sized for ages 2 to 5. Big rows, short tasks, no reading required. Five pages in the pack: a five-job weekly grid, an eight-job version for older toddlers, a daily Big Three card, a behavior helpers list, and a blank build-your-own. No email, no upsell.
What’s in the free download
- Page 1, Five-job weekly grid: the simplest possible chore chart, ages 2 to 5
- Page 2, Eight-job version: for toddlers who want more to do
- Page 3, Today’s Big Three: a single-day card with three big checkboxes
- Page 4, Behavior helpers: tiny goals (used kind words, listened the first time)
- Page 5, Blank build-your-own: empty grid with six rows × seven days
All five pages are US Letter and black-and-white friendly. The chores are intentionally short — “Pick up toys” not “Tidy your room” — so a 3-year-old can actually finish them.
Download the Toddler Chore Chart PDF
How to use the toddler chore chart printable
Five pages, four small habits. Print Page 1 the first time and don’t add a second page until your toddler has the rhythm.
Match the chore to the kid, not the age range. Some 3-year-olds can pack their own bag. Some 5-year-olds still need help getting dressed. Cross out the rows that don’t fit and the chart still works.
Use stickers, not check marks, for two-year-olds. A 2-year-old who can stick a sticker is winning. They don’t need to draw anything. By age 4 they can switch to a marker if they want.
Hand it back to the kid. Toddlers love taking charge of small things. Tape the chart at their height. Hand them the marker. Ask “what should we check off?” — they will do this exercise three times a day given the chance.
Skip a day on purpose. If everything goes sideways and nothing gets done, write “Hard day” across the row and move on. The chart is a habit, not a contract. Skipping one day on purpose teaches kids that the chart is a tool, not a judge.
When your toddler outgrows this, the free printable chore chart has the school-age version — same idea, more text, harder jobs.
Preview


What you’re looking at is Page 1, the five-job grid. Pages 2 through 4 are alternate formats. Page 5 is blank, for the families whose toddler chores are specific (feeding the dog, watering one plant, putting the cat treat away).
Related kids’ charts
- Free Printable Chore Chart: the all-ages 5-page version with separate toddler and school-age grids.
- Printable Chore Chart for Kids: the one-grid version for school-age kids.
- Free Printable Reward Chart: pairs with this for toddlers who need a small payoff.
- Free Printable Bedtime Routine Chart: covers the part of the toddler day where the wheels really come off.
Or grab everything in the Kids Routine Pack bundle: one download, one email, no juggling tabs.
Browse the rest of the kids charts library for behavior, feelings, reading logs, and more.
Save this for later on Pinterest
Pin one of these so you can find the chart the next time a 3-year-old throws a sock across the room.


Designed by Hannah B. for The Mommy Mess. Free for personal and classroom use. Please don’t repackage and resell, but please do print as many copies as your fridge can hold.
Hannah B.
Hannah B. is the editor at The Mommy Mess. She makes free printables for moms who would rather have a system than a Pinterest-perfect house.



