US Trends

what to do for halloween

Here are a bunch of fun, on-trend ideas if you’re wondering what to do for Halloween this year, plus a “Quick Scoop”-style overview at the end.

🎃 Big-picture options

You can think in three buckets: go out, stay in with friends, or keep it low- key and cozy.

  • Go out: festivals, haunted houses, themed bar nights, pumpkin patches, trunk-or-treats.
  • Stay in: host a murder mystery, movie marathon, or DIY haunted house at home.
  • Cozy: bake spooky treats, carve pumpkins, or have a craft night while listening to ghost stories.

🕺 Going out: social & active ideas

These work if you want a more “event” kind of Halloween, which is especially big in 2025–2026 with lots of organized activities.

  • Visit a haunted attraction: haunted houses, haunted ship tours, or immersive “haunted theatre” experiences are trending and often run for several nights in October.
  • Fall festival or pumpkin patch: many places bundle hayrides, corn mazes, bonfires, and photo spots through late October.
  • Trunk‑or‑treat or community fair: parking-lot trick-or-treating with decorated car trunks is now a staple in many towns, especially for kids and families.
  • Costume bar crawl or themed night: some cities have Halloween bar crawls, DJ nights, and costume contests near the 31st.

Example night out: hit a pumpkin patch in the afternoon, grab cider and photos, then change into costumes and go to a themed party or haunted attraction after dark.

🏠 Staying in: parties & hangouts

If you want something more controlled (and cheaper), throw your own mini-event at home.

  • Host a themed Halloween party
    • Pick a theme (classic monsters, 80s horror, vampires vs. witchy glam).
* Add one or two simple party games like “witch hat ring toss” or “best scream contest.”
  • Murder mystery dinner
    • Use a premade murder mystery kit or online script and assign everyone a character.
* Serve “poisoned” cocktails (colored drinks) and “bloody” desserts with berry sauces.
  • DIY haunted house at home
    • Darken a hallway, add sound effects, fake cobwebs, and jump-scare props.
* Let guests walk through in small groups and rate the scare level.
  • Board games or video game night
    • Use spooky-themed games, horror co-op video games, or “one-shot” tabletop RPGs with a Halloween storyline.

🍿 Low-key & cozy: solo or small group

Perfect if you don’t feel like crowds but still want the Halloween mood.

  • Movie or series marathon
    • Pick a lane: cute/spooky (like family-friendly classics), psychological thrillers, or full horror.
* Make a simple checklist and cross each title off through October.
  • Pumpkin carving & decorating
    • Go to a pumpkin patch or store, then carve or paint pumpkins at home.
* Try themes: favorite characters, minimalist faces, or intricate patterns (use stencils).
  • Bake Halloween treats
    • Cookies shaped like bats, ghost cupcakes, or a “graveyard” pudding with cookie tombstones.
* You can also make a “haunted” gingerbread house with orange and black candy.
  • Crafts & creative projects
    • Make your own decorations: paper bats, ghost garlands, painted jars with LED candles.
* Try a “spooky paint and sip” evening where you follow a Halloween painting tutorial with friends.

👨‍👩‍👧 If you’ve got kids around

Many recent lists highlight kid-friendly Halloween ideas that are big for 2026.

  • Trick-or-treating (classic): plan a safe route and coordinate costumes as a family theme.
  • Trunk‑or‑treat events: check schools, churches, or community centers for parking-lot candy events.
  • Pumpkin patch field trip: let kids pick a pumpkin, then carve or paint it at home.
  • At‑home kids’ party: short costume parade, simple crafts, and a not‑too-scary movie.

🌐 “Trending” vibes for 2026

Recent Halloween guides emphasize mixing fall aesthetics with “experiences” rather than just one night of trick-or-treating.

  • Experience-focused: paint-and-sip, immersive theatre, escape-room style games, and themed dinners are heavily promoted as adult Halloween fun.
  • Long Halloween season: events and activities often run from mid-September through late October, not just on the 31st.
  • Family + community focus: pumpkin patches, trunk-or-treats, and festivals show up in many “top activities” lists as core traditions.

🧭 Quick Scoop (TL;DR)

  • If you want to go out: pick a haunted house, festival, or costume night and turn it into a full evening with photos and themed snacks.
  • If you want to stay in: host a murder mystery, small party, or movie marathon with simple decorations and one or two signature treats.
  • If you want it chill: carve pumpkins, bake something spooky, and watch a themed movie or series with a few friends or solo.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.