Bingo ideas / For the classroom

Weather Bingo Cards

A daily game for a weather unit or a watch out the classroom window. Hand out cards of conditions to spot — a sunny sky, fog at the bus stop, a rainbow after the rain — and the first to a full line of sightings wins.

Free to design and print · edit any square · 3×3, 4×4, or 5×5

Weather bingo turns the daily forecast into a watching game kids can play over a week. Fill the squares with the conditions your area actually sees — the morning fog, the afternoon thunderstorm, the windy day that scatters the leaves — and let students mark each one as it happens. Keep the squares below or swap in your local weather in a couple of minutes.

Because every card is shuffled from the same square list, no two students get the same grid, so a whole class can run the same week-long game and each child still chases their own conditions to mark off.

Squares for a weather card
  • Sunny
  • Rainy
  • Cloudy
  • Snow
  • Thunderstorm
  • Rainbow
  • Fog
  • Windy
  • Hail
  • Lightning
  • Drizzle
  • Frost
  • Sleet
  • Heat wave
  • Clear sky
  • Overcast
  • Breeze
  • Puddle
  • Dew
  • Humid
  • Gusty
  • Partly cloudy
  • Blizzard
  • Sunset

These are just a starting point — swap in your own words in the editor before you print.

Ideas for your game
  • Run it across a whole week

    Hand out cards on Monday and let students mark conditions as they appear, so a single game tracks the weather all the way to Friday.

  • Tie it to the morning forecast

    Check the day's forecast together at the start of class, then mark the conditions as they show up, turning the routine into a daily lesson.

  • Print for the class or play on phones

    Print a card per student, or share one link and a QR code so each child marks the weather they spot from a shared classroom screen.

Editable and printable

Edit every square. Open the card in the editor, keep the suggested squares or replace them with your own words, emoji, or photos, and pick a theme that fits the day.

Print a whole set at once. Each card is shuffled from the same square list, so every player gets a unique grid. Print to standard letter or A4 paper on any home printer — or order professionally printed cards shipped to your door.

Or play live. Share one link and a QR code and the whole room plays from their phones, in person or over video.

Questions

How do I make a weather bingo card for free?

Open the editor, pick the watercolor theme, keep the suggested conditions or type your local weather, and print. You can design a basic set for free.

Which weather should I put on the squares?

Use conditions your area actually gets across a week, mixing common ones like sunny and cloudy with rarer events like hail so the game stays winnable.

Can I print the cards on regular paper?

Yes. The print view is sized for standard letter and A4 paper, so any classroom printer works, and you can also order professionally printed cards.

What grid size suits a young classroom?

Switch to a 3×3 or 4×4 grid in the editor for younger students so a game can fill within a few days rather than stretching across many weeks.