What to Do When Your Child Won’t Pick a Halloween Costume
Every October, families everywhere face the same challenge: what do you do when your child can’t decide and won’t commit on a costume?
If you’ve ever had a kid change their mind about a costume the night before trick-or-treating, you know exactly how stressful this can be.
As both a mom and a psychologist, I’ve lived this firsthand. Last year, one of my kids wore one outfit to school and an entirely different one for trick-or-treating. And honestly? That’s pretty common. Kids Halloween costumes feel like a small thing on the surface, but for many families, they become a source of conflict and stress.
So let’s talk about why costumes feel so important, how parents on Halloween can reduce the stress, and what role setting boundaries with kids plays in keeping the peace.
Why It’s So Hard to Pick a Halloween Costume
If your child struggles to pick a Halloween costume, you’re not alone. Kids are flooded with influences: movies, TV shows, friends at school, and endless marketing. One week they want to be Elsa, the next week Batman, and then suddenly Paw Patrol feels like the only option.
Here’s why it feels so intense for kids:
Their peers are constantly asking, “What are you going to be?”
Costumes are tied to identity and self-expression.
Photos and memories from Halloween last for years, which makes it feel “high stakes.”
For kids, choosing a costume is almost like adults shopping for a wedding outfit - it feels big, important, and permanent. That’s why so many kids Halloween costumes get swapped at the last minute.
The Pressure Parents Feel on Halloween
It’s not just kids who feel it. Parents on Halloween carry their own stress too. We often wonder:
Are we being judged for how much effort (or money) we put into costumes?
Will our child be upset on the big day and take it out on us?
Are we letting them down if we say no to another new costume?
This is where guilt creeps in. When kids are crying in costumes they don’t want to wear, parents can feel like failures. But here’s the truth: the problem isn’t the costume itself - it’s the way we approach expectations, boundaries, and flexibility.
So let’s talk about what to do…
1: Decide Your Limits First
Before you even start costume shopping, think about what’s realistic for your family. How much money, time, and energy are you truly willing to put into Halloween?
Some families are comfortable buying multiple costumes. Others have a one-costume-per-year rule. For me, I’ve decided that I’ll buy one new costume per child, and after that, they can mix and match from our dress-up bin.
When you decide your limits in advance, you’re not scrambling at the last minute. You already know what you’re willing to do, and your child learns that part of setting boundaries with kids is about protecting everyone’s energy - not just saying “no.”
2: Communicate the Rules Clearly
Once you’ve made your decision, it’s time to be upfront with your kids. Children feel safer when they know what to expect. That’s why clear rules are so important for parents on Halloween.
You might say:
“We’ll buy one new costume this year. If you change your mind, you’ll need to choose from what we already have.”
“We have $30 to spend on costumes, and you can decide how to use it.”
“If you don’t want a new costume, we can create something together from our dress-up box.”
When you spell it out, you’re not leaving room for last-minute battles. And you’re teaching your child that kids Halloween costumes are fun, but they also come with limits. This is where setting boundaries with kids really shines - you’re being kind but firm.
3: Wait to Buy Until Closer to Halloween
Here’s the truth: younger kids are indecisive by nature. Expecting them to pick a Halloween costume in September is like asking them to predict what they’ll want for lunch two months from now. It’s just not realistic.
That’s why I recommend waiting until the middle of October before making the purchase. By then, kids are more likely to have settled on their final choice. Even then, it’s wise to double-check before you hit “order” or swipe your card.
This simple strategy saves money, reduces stress, and helps parents on Halloween avoid resentment. It’s a way of setting boundaries with kids while also honoring the fact that their minds change - and that’s developmentally normal.
Helping your child pick a Halloween costume doesn’t have to drain your energy or your wallet. By deciding your limits, communicating the rules, and waiting until closer to Halloween, you can keep things simple and fun.
Yes, kids Halloween costumes will always come with excitement and indecision. But when parents on Halloween use these three steps, they create a balance of joy and structure. And with clear expectations, you’re modeling the kind of boundary-setting your child needs in every area of life.
So this year, instead of bracing yourself for meltdowns, try these strategies. They’ll help you keep Halloween magical for your kids - while also protecting your own sanity.
Want more parenting strategies like this? Listen to the full episode here.
For extra support beyond Halloween, explore Thriving Child Center or connect with PCIT Experts. Both offer expert guidance to help families thrive year-round.
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[00:00:00] Leah Clionsky: Welcome to the Educated Parent Podcast. I am your host, Dr. Leah Konski, and today we will solve the parenting dilemma that is challenging us all the most in October. And here is our dilemma. What do you do when your young child cannot decide on a Halloween costume? Tell me you've been there. Most of us have been there in this tricky situation.
[00:00:30] Leah Clionsky: So this is one of our episodes that's just you and me. It's one of our chats, and even though it seems almost silly for us to focus on Halloween costumes. The reality is, is that this topic is very timely and also kind of a source of stress for many parents that I know. Have you ever been in this situation?
[00:00:55] Leah Clionsky: Your child has gone back and forth about Halloween costumes all fall. They finally decided on what they want to be and the night before they changed their mind. Or the day of, they change their mind and there you are scrambling trying to get the new costume that they want and you know that this is actually really important to them.
[00:01:20] Leah Clionsky: So it's a, it can be a really tough moment for us at times. I know for my kids, they were so indecisive last year that they each wore one costume to school and an entirely different costume to trigger treating. So we're gonna talk about this. We're gonna talk about why this becomes so important. We're gonna talk about some parenting approaches that you can have in the background to help you decide how you want to handle this.
[00:01:51] Leah Clionsky: And we're gonna go through a framework for how you can meet your child's needs and go along with their self exception, self-expression and creativity. While also not driving yourself completely up the wall, like operating under a dictator who has very high expectations and very little understanding of reality in making those expectations happen.
[00:02:28] Leah Clionsky: So first let's talk about why this Halloween costume idea is so important to kids. I think it's really easy to dismiss it and be like, oh, who cares what they wear? However, for young kids figuring out what you're going to be for Halloween. Is really important to you, like there is a lot of focus on it from other parents, from your parents, from peers.
[00:03:02] Leah Clionsky: In our culture starting in the fall, we start asking kids, what do you think you're gonna wanna be for Halloween this year? And then their friends ask them the same question and then they're asking themselves and they keep playing out different ideas. So they're like watching a movie and they're like, this year I'm gonna be Tiana.
[00:03:21] Leah Clionsky: And you're like, okay, maybe you'll be Tiana. And then they're watching some other TV show. And they realize that actually they wanna be sky from Paw Patrol or then they're talking to their best friend and their best friend is going to be Elsa. And so now your child wants to be Elsa too, right? So this figuring out like, what will I be for Halloween is kind of high pressure.
[00:03:45] Leah Clionsky: It involves a new costume, potentially. It's figuring out do you want to be like everyone else? Like do you wanna be part of a themed costume? Do you wanna wear the exact same costume as your best friend or do you wanna stand out? So all of those different considerations are coming in. It's sort of like I, I think for kids, it's almost like for adults picking a wedding dress.
[00:04:13] Leah Clionsky: Like it's just so much. Thought goes into it, trying to express yourself in this new way that will then be documented with lots and lots of pictures because after you pick your costume, people are gonna comment on it repeatedly to you during the day if there's school Halloween event or during trick or treating.
[00:04:35] Leah Clionsky: Absolutely. There are going to be constant comments about whatever it is that you chose. So I actually do think for kids it does feel very high pressure. I think for some parents actually it can feel high pressure as well. You know, because if we're feeling judged based upon what we dressed our child in as for Halloween and how happy they feel about it, that can be a place where parents are also thinking like, are other parents gonna judge me if my child.
[00:05:05] Leah Clionsky: Goes out in a costume and they're crying 'cause they obviously don't wanna be wearing miss. So sometimes those stressors combined can turn this into a really challenging issue. So there is obviously no specific evidence-based parenting around Halloween costume. However, there are some parenting principles that you can take and apply to the Halloween costume dilemma situation.
[00:05:35] Leah Clionsky: And so when I think about parenting and the parenting that is best supported in our literature and also the parenting approach that I've seen work best with families, it is a style of parenting called authoritative parenting. Not to be confused with authoritarian parenting. So let me describe what this is.
[00:05:59] Leah Clionsky: So authoritative parenting is a style of parenting that balances warmth and connection with your child, with also clear and firm boundaries and limits. So it's the style of parenting where we care about our kids, we care what they think, we're connecting with them and accepting them emotionally. And we also have boundaries around what is acceptable and not in our house.
[00:06:25] Leah Clionsky: In our relationship, we have clear rules that they understand. So don't confuse this with authoritarian parenting, which is actually has a lot of research that tells us that it's very, very problematic for kids and for the adults they turn into, which is really harsh parenting with very little warmth.
[00:06:45] Leah Clionsky: But if we take this principle of authoritarian parenting. You're trying to balance several things. So you're trying to balance your child's desire to self-express in their Halloween costume, right? And their happiness and joy. You are attuned to the fact that this is important to them, and you're also there thinking there is a limit to what I'm willing to do, right?
[00:07:11] Leah Clionsky: And there is a limit to like my own energy around this topic. Because either extreme can cause a lot of stress in the relationship. For example, if you say to your child, Halloween is a magical time of year, I will buy you as many Halloween costumes as you want. You may be
[00:07:39] Leah Clionsky: you if you say, this is a magical time of year. I will buy you as many Halloween costumes as you want. You could end up buying 30 Halloween costumes, right? You could end up spending lots of money and lots of energy buying things for your child to turn around and say, I didn't want that. I don't wanna have that costume.
[00:08:01] Leah Clionsky: And internally, you are gonna start feeling resentful. Right. You're gonna start feeling taken advantage of, irritated with your child, and at that point you set yourself up for that, right? You didn't set any boundaries around that. So your child just takes you at your, their at your word, right? They go for it, and then you are feeling resentment because you didn't set the boundary.
[00:08:25] Leah Clionsky: So that is not where you wanna go with this. The other side of this is being way too strict and saying On September 1st you will select one Halloween costume and you will wear it, right? And whatever you want outside of that, you can't have, that's probably pretty unrealistic, especially for younger kids who, like your opinion can change so many times in two months.
[00:08:50] Leah Clionsky: If you are five years old, seven years old, right? Like there's just too much going on. So that would be really, really, really unrealistic and unnecessarily strict. So, you know, either extreme there is probably not where you want to be. You wanna be somewhere in the middle where you're offering your child permission to self-express.
[00:09:16] Leah Clionsky: There are some limits and boundaries to the amount of work and effort and finances that you are going to put into this decision. Luckily, with teenagers, usually they can figure this out completely on their own. They're responsible, but for little kids, you're really guiding this along with some expectation management.
[00:09:34] Leah Clionsky: And you've heard me talk about expectation management in other episodes, ironically, around Halloween. And when I tried to make a haunted house as a child and the entire thing backfired 'cause my expectations were unrealistic. But setting expectations for your child about what Halloween will be like and what kinds of accommodations you are willing to make around costumes, that's important too.
[00:10:00] Leah Clionsky: Okay. Let's discuss some ways of thinking about this and some strategies to consider when you are balancing out and trying to solve the great Halloween indecision dilemma.
[00:10:26] Leah Clionsky: The first thing that you want to think about in advance before we communicate anything to our kids, you wanna think about how much finances, energy, and resources am I willing and able to put into Halloween costumes? Because that will change how you structure this, right? Are you on a tight budget where you really have to limit how much money can be put towards a Halloween costume?
[00:10:57] Leah Clionsky: Are you on a tight timeline where you're like, I am so incredibly busy, I can probably allocate one shopping trip for a Halloween costume, or do you have more energy than this or more resources than this? My personal rule, that to me works as a balance, and this is not the rule everyone should have, but I am comfortable buying one new Halloween costume per child per year.
[00:11:26] Leah Clionsky: However, they do already have other costumes from past years, from dress up, from gifts, from things that they've put together themselves. So I'm willing to buy one new Halloween costume, but if they choose not to wear it. Wear something they already have, that's totally fine with me. Or if they wanna do what they did last year and wear the new costume trick or treating in a different costume that they already had during the day, also fine with me.
[00:11:54] Leah Clionsky: So that's kind of where I personally am with my resources of energy where I'm like, I'll go all in with you. On one costume, but that's going to be it. But it's worth thinking about in advance.
[00:12:14] Leah Clionsky: Sorry, Shanley, it's worth thinking about in advance because if you don't know what your resources are, then you're not gonna be able to communicate clearly. So I would think that process through in advance, once you know, then you want to communicate that to your child so you can say to them, listen, you know it's gonna be Halloween next month.
[00:12:42] Leah Clionsky: I know you're really excited about that. We already have a lot of Halloween costumes at home, and you can be any of the things we have at home. Or if you decide you wanna be something else, we can buy you one costume for that. But we're only gonna buy one costume. So when you decide, if you change your mind, I'm not gonna buy a new costume.
[00:13:03] Leah Clionsky: You can wear the things you already have at that point. So you're just really laying out what that will be. Okay. So you decide, then you clearly communicate. The third thing that I think is very helpful to do. To be realistic about little kids and the fact that they are probably going to have a hard time committing until it is very close to Halloween itself.
[00:13:32] Leah Clionsky: So even though my kids have started talking about Halloween, again, back at the beginning of September, maybe a couple times over the summer, I have not bought anything yet, right? Because I do not believe. They have actually settled on their final destination of Halloween costume. Now, you may have a different child than that.
[00:13:54] Leah Clionsky: You may have a child who decides to be something and when they make a decision it will not change. And there are children that who are that way, who my children, especially at the age that they are, time is just so long for them. They perceive my five minutes as like five hours, like two months is just so long in the life of a 3-year-old, for example.
[00:14:19] Leah Clionsky: So I'm just gonna like listen to topics and like reiterate them and be like, oh yeah, that could be cool. Oh yeah, that could be cool, but I'm probably not gonna buy something until halfway through the month. And then I'm gonna verify. I'm gonna be like, this is the costume. If you change your mind, we have these other choices, but this is the costume I'm going to buy.
[00:14:37] Leah Clionsky: I'm just gonna be realistic. I'm just not gonna commit to something. I feel like I'm kind of setting them up to fail if they do that. Little kids have a really hard time having this understanding that what they need and want right now will different than what they need and want later. It's when your child says to you, I'm not hungry, or, um, this is a better example.
[00:15:00] Leah Clionsky: I don't have to use the potty. Right now, and you're like, yes, but in 10 minutes you will have to use the potty. So try now. And they like, just don't buy it. They're like, well, I don't have to go right now. Of course you're right. 10 minutes later they're like, take me to the potty. Right? This is like a typical little kid thought pattern where they just don't know, or I'm not hungry now.
[00:15:20] Leah Clionsky: And you're like, yeah, but if you don't have a snack in an hour, you're gonna be really cranky. And they have a really hard time understanding this idea of like, what will I want later? And that's why, um, expecting them to know what they want to be for Halloween later is challenging for a lot of kids. So if you know that your kids struggle with that, don't put that burden on them.
[00:15:44] Leah Clionsky: At least keep it a little bit closer to time. And then, you know, at the day of, they throw you a curve ball stick within the limits that you set. You can be validating and non-shaming. You can be like, yeah, I know it's hard that suddenly you found out about Batman yesterday and you didn't know about him before and now you wanna be Batman for Halloween.
[00:16:08] Leah Clionsky: But unfortunately, it is the day before Halloween, we don't have that costume. So you can be. The dinosaur that you already have, that you've had for a long time, or you can be this new, um, lion King costume that we just bought, right? These are your choices, but unfortunately, I'm not gonna go out and buy you a Batman costume, right?
[00:16:33] Leah Clionsky: So you validate, you set the limit. You appreciate where they're coming from, but at this point, often a lot of kids will go along with one of their choices because at least they have picked it. Um, if you don't wanna have your kids buy costumes, you could set a limit at the beginning. That's, that says like, we will use a costume we already have, or make one.
[00:16:56] Leah Clionsky: Let's think about what we might wanna have or make, right? So like, again, the buying thing doesn't have to happen. I'm just using my own personal example of how I set this up. So whatever your premise is at the beginning, you stick with it throughout where you're balancing this understanding of. This is really important to my child.
[00:17:16] Leah Clionsky: Of course, it feels high stakes to them. I get it. And I have a certain amount of time, energy, finances that I'm willing to put towards this and balancing those two things together, just like most of parenting is always the challenge. But I'm glad that you're listening to me talk about this topic. If you find that you get really frustrated with your child in these situations and you're like.
[00:17:42] Leah Clionsky: Why am I reacting so strongly? You might be a great fit for our calm and connected program? For parents, it's a group with other parents who are trying to stay calm and connected even when they're overwhelmed. It's run by a wonderfully kind clinical psychologist who is very non-judgmental, and if you're in that situation.
[00:18:03] Leah Clionsky: This group might be just what you're looking for. Um, if you notice that you're having a lot of conflict with your child about Halloween or other topics in general, you know, we do provide services at Thriving Child Center and in our PCIT Expert Specialty Clinic. So give us a call. We can help you out, and we can help you smooth things out so that your relationship feels good to everyone involved.
[00:18:28] Leah Clionsky: All right. It's a wonderful just talk with you. I hope you have an amazing Halloween. And everyone wears the costume that they really want to wear.