Snow days are basically a free science lab. With a few simple supplies, you can turn winter weather into hands-on learning that feels like play (and burns a little extra energy, too).

These DIY snow science experiments for kids are easy, mostly low-mess, and great for ages 5–12. Always use adult supervision, especially with hot water, food coloring, and outdoor conditions.

Quick supplies to grab

  • Fresh snow (or a bowl of snow brought inside)
  • Clear cups or jars
  • Measuring cups/spoons
  • Food coloring (optional)
  • Salt
  • String or yarn
  • Spray bottle (optional)
  • Thermometer (optional)
  • Paper + pencil for notes

Safety notes

  • Use clean, fresh snow from the top layer (not snow near roads, pets, or sidewalks).
  • Kids should not eat snow (even “clean” snow can contain dirt or pollutants).
  • Warm water experiments should be handled by an adult.

1) How Much Water Is in Snow? (Snow-to-Water Ratio)

What you’ll learn: Snow is mostly air, so it melts down to a surprisingly small amount of water.

How to do it:

  • Pack a measuring cup with snow (don’t compress too hard).
  • Measure the snow amount (example: 1 cup of snow).
  • Let it melt at room temperature (or an adult can gently warm it).
  • Measure the melted water.

Try this: Compare fluffy snow vs. packed snow. Which makes more water?

2) Melting Race: Salt vs. No Salt

What you’ll learn: Salt lowers the freezing point of water, helping ice and snow melt faster.

How to do it:

  • Make two small snow piles on a tray or plate.
  • Sprinkle salt on one pile and leave the other alone.
  • Watch and compare for 5–10 minutes.

Question to ask: Which pile changes first? What happens to the texture?

3) Snow Volcano (Baking Soda + Vinegar)

What you’ll learn: Chemical reactions can create gas (bubbles) that “erupts.”

How to do it:

  • Build a small snow mound outside and make a crater in the top.
  • Add 1–2 tablespoons of baking soda into the crater.
  • Add a few drops of food coloring (optional).
  • Pour in vinegar and watch it fizz.

Tip: Do this outside for easy cleanup.

4) Crystal “Ice” Ornaments (Salt Crystals)

What you’ll learn: When water evaporates, dissolved salt can form crystals.

How to do it:

  • Cut a simple shape from cardboard (snowflake, star, heart).
  • Brush the cardboard lightly with water.
  • Sprinkle salt generously over the wet surface.
  • Let it dry overnight and observe the crystals.

Optional: Add a string loop and hang it in a window.

5) Snow Paint (Color + Temperature Observation)

What you’ll learn: Temperature affects how quickly snow melts, and color can change what you notice.

How to do it:

  • Fill a spray bottle with water and add a few drops of food coloring.
  • Spray designs onto snow outside (lines, shapes, letters).
  • Watch how the colored areas melt and sink into the snow over time.

Question to ask: Do thin lines melt faster than thick areas?

6) Snow Insulation Test (Does Snow Keep Things Warm?)

What you’ll learn: Snow can act like insulation by trapping air.

How to do it:

  • Place two identical cups of cold water outside.
  • Bury one cup in snow (leave the other exposed).
  • Check after 15–30 minutes and compare temperatures (a thermometer helps).

Talk about it: How could this help animals in winter?

7) Snowball Strength Challenge (Engineering + Testing)

What you’ll learn: Different snow types pack differently, changing “strength.”

How to do it:

  • Make snowballs using different snow: fluffy, wet, packed, or mixed.
  • Drop each snowball from the same height (example: waist height).
  • Observe which holds together best.

Record it: Rate each snowball from 1–5 for strength.

8) Track Detective (Animal Science)

What you’ll learn: You can observe animal behavior by studying tracks and patterns.

How to do it:

  • Go on a short walk and look for tracks in snow.
  • Take photos or sketch what you see.
  • Look for clues: size, shape, stride length, and where the tracks lead.

Tip: You don’t have to identify the animal perfectly. The observation is the win.

9) Snow “Magnifying” Observation (Close-Up Science)

What you’ll learn: Snowflakes have patterns and shapes (even if they’re hard to catch perfectly).

How to do it:

  • Chill a dark piece of paper or cardboard outside for a few minutes.
  • Catch snowflakes on it.
  • Look closely with a magnifying glass if you have one.
  • Sketch what you notice before it melts.

10) Fast vs. Slow Melt: Warm Water vs. Cold Water

What you’ll learn: Warmer water transfers heat faster, melting snow quicker.

How to do it:

  • Fill two identical cups with the same amount of snow.
  • In one cup, add a small amount of cold water.
  • In the other cup, an adult adds a small amount of warm (not boiling) water.
  • Compare how quickly the snow melts.

Ask: Which cup changes first? What happens to the snow texture?

Make it a mini “science day”

  • Pick 2–3 experiments (that’s plenty).
  • Have kids make a prediction first: “What do you think will happen?”
  • Write one sentence after: “What did we notice?”

If you try any of these DIY snow science experiments for kids, save a photo of your setup or your results. It’s fun to compare what different families observe on different kinds of snow days.