Halloween Made Calmer (Autism-Friendly Printables + Free Stuff)

autistic kids trick or treating

Halloween can be exciting… and also a bit much. Lights, costumes, crowds, weird textures, loud noises, and surprise doorbells can overload anyone fast. If you’re supporting autistic kids, the aim is simple: keep it predictable, visual, and low-pressure.

purple halloween pumpkin

1) Maths & money (pumpkin coin count + simple sums)

Download this Pumpkin coin count worksheet to add some change to this holiday theme.

Check out this Halloween addition worksheet for beginners.

Halloween money worksheets – (count coins with a Halloween theme). 

Halloween addition/subtraction/printables – (easy worksheets across lots of levels). 

KidZone Halloween maths (Grades 1–5) – (the “classic” generated worksheets, organised by grade). 

Quick tip: Do just 5 questions, then a break. Short wins build confidence.

2) Counting + cut & paste (trick-or-treat bag style)

If you liked the “Trick or Treat Bag” counting activity, these are solid replacements:

Download this Halloween counting worksheet.

You should download this Trick or Treat bag. It is a 2-page counting, cut-and-paste activity worksheet.

Halloween counting cut-and-paste worksheet – (count objects, then cut and stick the correct number). 

Aussie Halloween number games – (printable number cards and activities). 

3) Candy choice-making + communication board (AAC-friendly)

Perfect for kids who want to join in, but words disappear when things get busy.

Here are 2 easy Halloween cross-out activities. Download the first one here and the second one here.

Download this Trick or Treat Candy Conversation Board. Print this to promote topical verbal, nonverbal exchanges and choice-making. You can do this during morning circle, calendar time, or whenever you focus on conversation.

Free printable Trick-or-Treat AAC cards – (great for “trick or treat”, “thank you”, “no thanks”, “help”, “all done”). 

A roundup of AAC Halloween printables – (bracelets, labels, and more). 

Free Trick-or-Treating social story – (photos + simple scripts). 

autistic astronaut kid

4) Matching “folder games” (numbers 11–20)

These are great for independent work and calm table time.

Download these Halloween matching folder Game numbers 11-20. You can print them out. Page onepage two and page three.

Halloween number-matching cards (1–20) (use as a file-folder matching game). 

Free Halloween counting file-folder games (ready-to-print pack). 

5) Crafts (bat clips + pasta skeleton)

Bat clips craft (clothespin bats) with step-by-step instructions. 

Pasta skeleton craft – (glue pasta “bones” onto paper—super simple, looks awesome). 

Autism-friendly tweak – Offer gloves or a paintbrush for glue if sticky hands are a trigger.

6) “Blackline concentration” game (memory matching)

Free printable Halloween matching game – (print, cut, play). 

Printable Halloween memory game – (with spooky pairs) (another simple option). 

7) Make Halloween more autism-friendly (simple plan)

If you only read one thing, use these practical tips:

Autism SA’s autism-friendly Halloween tips – (sensory supports, breaks, and keeping it safe). 

National Autistic Society tips (costume comfort, creating your own calm Halloween). 

Print 1 communication support (AAC cards or a social story).

Choose 1 maths sheet (counting or simple addition). 

Choose 1 craft (bat clips or pasta skeleton). 

Finish with 1 calm game (memory match). 

Have a reset option ready: headphones, a quiet corner, or a short “walk break”.