The best gifts do more than entertain. They build everyday skills—attention, turn-taking, communication skills, fine motor skills, and problem solving skills—while keeping play fun. For children with autism, choosing toys with the right sensory input and clear routines can make home time calmer and learning stickier. This guide pairs sensory-smart, educational toys with skill-building play routines you can use immediately.
If you want a tailored plan, our clinicians support families across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and surrounding areas.
Pick toys that:
- Invite repetition without boredom (toys with switches, tracks, or pieces to connect like train sets, marble runs, and construction sets).
- Allow for graded challenges (start with easy tasks, then introduce harder variations).
- Provide helpful sensory input (tactile, proprioceptive, and/or vestibular) without overwhelming your child.
- Encourage language and social skill development through role plays and imaginative play (utilizing props, figures, and open-ended play).
- Are easy to clean up and store so routines are repeatable.
It’s important to choose toys that fit your child’s current interests and sensory profile. When in doubt, start simple.
Below are examples of toys, supportive sensory play environments, and routines you can run in 5–10 minutes. During play, be sure to use labeled praise (“Nice gentle hands,” “Great waiting your turn”), model appropriate skills, and prompt as needed
1) Calming sensory toys
Good picks: kinetic sand, play-dough tools, putty with beads, water beads in a sealed bin, textured blocks.
Why they help: Provide controlled sensory exploration while strengthening hand eye coordination and fine motor skills.
Example play routine:
- During the first minute of play, model how to appropriately engage with the toy (e.g., press your hands together in the sand or play dough, create a play dough snake).
- Then, add language. Narrate your play (“I’m building a rocket ship!”), label textures (“squishy,” “bumpy”), model requests (“I need more sand”).
- Now you’re ready to expand to pretend play (“Let’s play bakery! Make 2 cookies”).Track one tiny metric (number of requests or 30-second calm hands) to see progress.
2) Toys to help regulate the nervous system before play
Good picks: mini trampoline with handle, crash pad, tunnels, scooter board, weighted lap pad.
Why they help: Short bursts of movement settle the body and prepare for seated tasks; they also feed proprioceptive/vestibular systems for better sensory integration. During play, praise your child for appropriate behavior (“I love how you’re jumping with a safe body!”), and keep rules short and consistent (“Only one person on the scooter at a time”).
Example play routine:
- Model jumping in place for 10 seconds before doing a puzzle.
- Encourage your child to tunnel crawl, give them a high-five, and then read a book together.”
3) Educational toys to promote cognitive development and problem solving skills
Good picks: magnetic tiles, gears, marble runs, snap circuits (supervised), STEM builder kits.
Why they help: Planning, sequencing, and visual-spatial skills; great for hand eye coordination.
Example play routine:
- Use a first-then visual (“First draw your idea, then build it”) to encourage planning and create predictability.
- Then add “fix-it” challenges (“This marble is stuck, we have to move one piece.”)
- Model expanded language (“I need ___,” “We can put that piece on top/under/next to this one.”
- Over time, increase the level of difficulty. For example, play games like “copy my design.”
4) Fidget toys and focus tools: regulate, don’t distract
Good picks: simple popper, tangle, textured pencil grips, quiet putty, chair bands.
Why they help: Keep hands busy to support attention during reading or meals. Be sure to establish ground rules (“We play with our fidgets quietly in our laps”).
Example play routine using fidget toys and focus tools:
- Establish simple rules (“The fidget stays in your hands while we read two pages”).
- Encourage turn taking (“Squeeze, then pass”).
5) Pretend play kits for role playing and communication skills
Good picks: play kitchen/food sets, doctor kit, dollhouse/figurines, store/post office props.
Why they help: Scripted social interaction helps children with autism, who benefit from clear roles; boosts language development and supports the development of social understanding.
Example play routine:
- Model social routines (“Knock knock, come in!”) and encourage your child to imitate. Start with simple two-step routines.
- Elaborate on the play by adding choices. (“Would you like pizza or soup?” “Pay with card or cash?”)
- Expand the play by introducing typical problems (“We’re out of bread,” “Baby is sleeping”) to practice flexibility.
6) Toys to promote early language and requesting
Good picks: inset puzzles with knobs, cause-and-effect toys (spin/light buttons), picture books with flaps, simple AAC-friendly picture cards.
Why they help: High-rate opportunities to request, comment, and follow one-step directions.
Example play routine:
- When playing with puzzles, hold a piece at your child’s eye level, wait for them to verbally say “want” or point, prompt if needed, then label together (“You want the blue piece”).
- When playing with toys that utilize cause-and-effect, use simple instructions (“Push,” “more,” “again,” “stop”).
7) Turn-taking and “my turn/your turn” board games
Good picks: “First Orchard,” “Pop the Pig,” “Feed the Woozle,” “Outfoxed!,” “Spot It!,” “Sushi Go!,” Connect Four.
Why they help: Waiting, shifting, winning/losing gracefully—these are core communication skills needed for social understanding.
Example play routine:
- Use a stop light visual card. Red means wait your turn, green means go. Pair this with the use of praise (“Thank you for waiting!”).
- End the game with a team round so everyone leaves with a win.
Matching toys to goals
| Goal | Try this | Sample routine |
|---|---|---|
| Calm body for meals | Putty, weighted lap pad | 10-second squeeze before each bite |
| Build fine motor skills | Lacing beads, tongs + pom-poms | Request one color pom-pom or bead at a time |
| Grow language development | Picture books, figurines | “Who/What/Where” questions; expand on their response |
| Improve hand eye coordination | Magnetic fishing, ball-target, ring toss | 10 throws of a ring toss |
| Problem solving skills | Gears, marble run, logic blocks | Building challenges |
| Support the development of social play | Cooperative board games | Roles: timer, card dealer, cleanup captain |
| Increase pretend flexibility | Doctor/store kits | Scripts for typical activities/roles |
Make play a part of your day
Morning: 3-minute movement break before 3-minutes of language play (e.g., practicing requesting specific breakfast items).
After school: 10-minute builder challenge game before 5-minutes of reading with a fidget tool.
Evening: 5-minute social routine script before 2-minutes of cleanup with a visual checklist.
Consistency beats marathon sessions. Two or three short blocks daily drive more growth than a single long session.
Creating supportive environments at home
- Visible choices, limited clutter. Keep two bins out and the others closed. Too many options can fragment play.
- First–then cards. “First build 5 pieces, then car song.”
- Model, prompt, fade. Show it once, help briefly, then step back.
- Labeled praise. “Great job asking with words,” “I love how patiently you waited,” “I like when you use gentle hands.”
- Simple data. Tally one behavior (e.g., requests, turns, calm body). Review on Sundays to pick the next target.
Budget-friendly ideas and DIY
- Rice/bean sensory bin with cups and funnels for sensory exploration (supervised).
- Painter’s tape roads on the floor for cars and “deliver the mail” role playing.
- Cardboard post office or store with real-world labels for communication skills (“stamp please,” “buy apple”).
- Deck of cards for sorting by color/number or Go-Fish.
- Laundry basket scooter (adult-pushed) for vestibular input with a clear stop signal.
Safety notes
Always supervise toys and games with small parts, water beads, and rideable items. Introduce new textures and sounds slowly. If strong adverse reactions appear (e.g., covering ears, leaving the area), pause and reduce the intensity—sensory experience should be regulating, not overwhelming.
Sample week
Mon: Kinetic sand. Practice making requests (5 min). Then, building with magnetic tiles (8 min).
Tue: Crawl tunnel + crashpad (3 min). Then, doctor kit to play “checkup” (6 minutes ).
Wed: Putty warm-up (2 min). Then, a board game (10 min).
Thu: Lacing beads (5 min). Then, picture book who/what/where (5 min).
Fri: Scooter board laps (3 min). Then, build a marble run (8 min).
Sat: Grocery store role playing (10 min). Then, free build (10 min).
Sun: Review your child’s wins; swap one toy; pick next week’s target word or skill.
What progress may look like after a month
- More independent starts and longer play episodes
- Clearer requests and more back-and-forth comments
- Better tolerance for textures and small changes
- Smoother turn-taking; fewer conflicts
- Stronger hand eye coordination, fine motor skills, and early cognitive development
We can help you personalize your gift list and play routines.
Manhattan Psychology Group designs ABA-informed play plans that fit your space, schedule, and goals. We match toys to sensory integration needs, coach communication skills and language development, and show you how to run short, effective routines that build social and learning foundations.
Services are available across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and nearby communities. Want a customized “toy + routine” map for your child? Reach out—we’ll help you choose, set up, and use gifts that truly support the development of social connection and skill growth for your child.
