Best Gifts for a Grandkid Who Has Everything
Our Top Pick
KiwiCo Monthly Subscription
Monthly project box for ages 2-16. New thing every month, not sitting in a pile.
Some grandkids already have everything.
If your grandchild’s bedroom overflows with unopened toys, their parents have everything they need, and every birthday produces a mountain of stuff — you’re in the “has everything” zone. Adding another toy to the pile doesn’t register. Adding another book gets lost in the stack.
Here’s how to give a gift that still matters.
The principle: stop competing with stuff
The mistake most grandparents make is trying to find the ONE physical gift that stands out against the material abundance. It’s nearly impossible. You’ll spend $100 on something, and it’ll be opened on the same day as 15 other gifts and lost in the shuffle.
Instead, shift categories entirely:
- Experience gifts create memories that beat physical stuff
- Subscription gifts deliver value monthly instead of one-day-then-forgotten
- Emotional gifts (handwritten letters, heirlooms, family history) carry weight stuff can’t
- Future gifts (529 plans, savings bonds, promised trips) compound over time
When you can’t out-stuff abundance, don’t try.
The picks that stand out
Experience gifts
A zoo, aquarium, or museum membership ($75-250/year). Good for the whole family. Kids remember visits in ways they don’t remember toys.
Concert or theater tickets for something specific they love ($50-300).
A class series: cooking classes, art classes, music lessons, pottery, coding camp ($150-500 for a block).
Theme park or water park season pass ($75-500).
A ‘Grandma day’ / ‘Grandpa day’ experience — a dedicated day with specific activities (trip to an ice cream shop, a specific location, a craft project together). Write it up as a formal “coupon” they redeem.
A family trip contribution — toward a weekend, a theme park visit, a specific destination.
Subscription gifts
KiwiCo monthly subscription ($20-35/month) — new projects every month, not a pile.
Lovevery Play Kits ($80/kit × multiple/year) — for babies and toddlers.
Raddish Kids Cooking Kit ($24-28/month) — monthly cooking with tools.
Audible subscription ($15/month or ~$180/year) — unlimited listening.
Magazine subscriptions: Highlights, Muse, Cricket, National Geographic Kids, American Girl ($20-50/year).
Spotify / Apple Music family plan ($17/month) — gift of music access.
Emotional / heirloom gifts
A handwritten letter to read at 18, 21, or a specific future moment. Sealed, given to the parents to hold.
A family recipe book — bound at a local print shop, containing your favorite recipes with the child in mind ($30-60).
A custom personalized storybook where the child is the protagonist (Wonderbly, Put Me in the Story) — the child’s name literally appears in the story.
A framed photo of you together — pre-framed, ready to hang.
A piece of family history — a typed document, a family tree, “Things I Want You to Know About Your Family.”
An heirloom piece — a piece of jewelry, a watch, an art piece from your collection — given with a written story of its origin.
Future / financial gifts
A 529 College Savings contribution ($100-5,000). Grows tax-advantaged for 18 years.
A savings bond — classic, symbolic future-gift.
Seed funding for a specific savings goal — “$500 toward your first car,” “$200 toward your first iPad.”
Contribution toward a major future trip — “$300 toward your high school graduation trip to Europe.”
Time-together gifts
A weekly phone call promise — formalized, scheduled, you’re now a weekly fixture in their life.
A monthly letter from you — you commit to one handwritten letter per month for a year. Huge for long-distance grandparents.
A “Grandma book club” — you both read the same book each month and discuss.
A “once-a-quarter trip” — you commit to a dedicated quarterly outing or trip.
What to avoid
Another stuffed animal — they have 40 of these already.
Another book (unless they specifically requested one) — likely to join a giant pile.
Another gift in their already-overflowing category — more LEGO for the LEGO overflowing kid, more dolls for the doll-collector.
Cheap version of something they already have the good version of — they’ll prefer the quality one.
Generic gifts — anything that feels like a placeholder. This child has plenty of stuff; they don’t need mediocre additions.
The time-scarcity reframe
Here’s a shift in perspective: for the “has everything” child, they don’t lack things — they lack time with you.
Grandparent time is the only resource they can’t accumulate more of.
A gift of your time — a weekly call, a monthly letter, a dedicated day together, a quarterly outing — competes in a category where nothing else does.
The grandchild who has every toy still doesn’t have enough of you.
The simple formula
For the grandchild who has everything:
- One experience or subscription gift — $100-300
- An emotional or time-together component — handwritten letter, promise of regular time together — $0-100
- Optionally, a financial forward-gift — 529 contribution, savings seed — $50-5,000
Total: $100-500 depending on what you can do. Hits all the non-stuff categories.
The bottom line
The grandchild who has everything doesn’t need more things. They need more presence, more experience, more emotional connection, more future-compounding gifts.
Stop trying to find the one toy that stands out. Give them an experience they remember, a subscription that keeps arriving, a letter they keep forever, or a piece of your time. That’s what they actually don’t have.
Full Comparison: Our Picks
KiwiCo Monthly Subscription
Monthly project box for ages 2-16. New thing every month, not sitting in a pile.
Audible Subscription
Unlimited audiobook listening. For the reader/listener — delivers value for a full year.
Lovevery Play Kits (Subscription)
For young grandkids (0-4) — premium curated toys that arrive quarterly.
Raddish Kids Cooking Subscription
Monthly cooking kit for 5-14 year olds. Creates skills, not another toy.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are gifts that aren't physical things?
Experience gifts: zoo or aquarium membership, theater tickets, concert tickets, a class series (cooking, art, music lessons), a theme park season pass, a special outing 'just us' day. Subscription gifts: KiwiCo crates, Lovevery kits, Raddish Kids cooking, a magazine subscription, Audible audiobooks. Digital gifts: Apple Music subscription, Spotify gift card, iTunes gift card, a specific game download. Future gifts: a 529 college savings contribution, a savings bond, a gift-now-enjoy-later like a promised trip. None add to the physical pile.
What's a good gift for the grandchild whose parents have plenty?
When the family has everything materially, focus on gifts that carry emotional or experiential weight: a handwritten letter about the family's history, a framed photo of you together, a personalized book (Wonderbly makes custom storybooks with the child as the protagonist), a family recipe book of your favorites, time-together gifts (a Grandma day, a trip, a weekly phone date promise), or a contribution to something larger (529 plan, charitable donation in their name). Material gifts compete with abundance; emotional gifts don't.
What should I NOT give a grandchild who has everything?
Three red flags: (1) more toys, books, or clothes in the same categories they already have abundant — adds to the pile without adding value; (2) 'cheaper version' of a quality item they already own; (3) gift cards to stores they don't shop at. When in doubt, shift to experience or emotional gifts rather than trying to find a material gift that stands out against abundance. You won't out-stuff abundance.
Are experience gifts really that good?
For the 'has everything' child, yes — exceptional. Experience gifts consistently outperform physical gifts in long-term memory. A zoo membership with monthly visits, a 'Grandma day' of special activities, a concert or theater experience — these become the gifts the grandchild brings up years later. The parents also appreciate not adding to the physical pile. The trick: make it specific and memorable, not generic ('a movie ticket' is weaker than 'a specific movie experience with popcorn and ice cream after').
What's a good gift for the grandchild who only wants specific high-end things?
When they have specific, expensive tastes, two options work: (1) contribute toward something expensive they're saving for — a specific iPad, a gaming rig, a designer item — with a note 'toward the [thing] you've been wanting'; (2) buy a lower-priced version of the aesthetic/brand they love, within your budget, even if it's not the top-tier version. Also consider: a gift card to the specific store or brand they prefer, which lets them choose what works. Match to their actual desires, not your sense of what they 'should' want.