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Finding the right kid-friendly tablet is a tricky endeavour. Credit: Reviewed / Lisa Lawrence

The Best Tablets for Kids in Canada of 2024

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Finding the right kid-friendly tablet is a tricky endeavour. Credit: Reviewed / Lisa Lawrence

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Product image of Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Edition (10th Gen)
Best Overall

Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Edition (10th Gen)

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It’s easy to set up, simple to use, and comes with so many pre-installed apps and videos it would take some time for your child to grow tired of it. Read More

Pros

  • Easy to use
  • Case is included
  • Long battery life

Cons

  • Kids can't follow along with their finger while reading
2
Product image of Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids Edition (9th Gen)

Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids Edition (9th Gen)

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The Fire HD 10 may be unwieldy for little kids, but children will enjoy the wide selection of apps. Parents will love the protective bumper case. Read More

Pros

  • Large screen
  • Colorful bumper case protects device
  • Charges quickly

Cons

  • Too big for little kids
3
Product image of Amazon Fire 7 Kids Edition (2019)

Amazon Fire 7 Kids Edition (2019)

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Consider this an affordable high end tablet for kids. It still carries the Amazon Fire title while missing some features like HD and processor speed. Read More

Pros

  • Supports MicroSD for additional space
  • Affordable
  • Expansive app suite

Cons

  • Screen is not HD
  • Less responsive touch screen
4
Product image of LeapFrog LeapPad Ultimate

LeapFrog LeapPad Ultimate

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The tablet itself is solidly built, but the interface leaves much to be desired. Kids may grow bored with it and parents can't add more exciting apps. Read More

Pros

  • Solidly built
  • Shatterproof glass screen

Cons

  • Difficult to use
  • Not ideal for kids who can't read yet
5
Product image of Dragon Touch K8

Dragon Touch K8

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This tablet is confusing to navigate and apps are slow to load. It is helpful that parents can add apps from the Google Play store. Read More

Pros

  • Carrying handle turns into a stand
  • Apps can be found in the Google Play store
  • Solid parental controls

Cons

  • Slow and clunky navigation
  • Pre-installed apps aren't that great
  • Best Overall Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Edition (10th Gen)
  • How We Tested Tablets for Kids
  • What You Should Know About Kids Tablets
  • Other Kids Tablets We Tested
  • More Articles You Might Enjoy

Introducing kids to screens can be a fraught experience. Whether it be via FaceTime with grandparents, Snapchat filters, watching movies, using educational apps, or Peppa Pig videoson YouTube Kids, once your child has seen a screen a few times, they'll be eager to see it again and again. For each parent, whether to allow children to play games and watch videos and for how long is different. But it's inevitable that you'll eventually have to decide which tablet is best for your kid.

That’s why, together with our kids ranging in age from 3 to 7, we tested eight different kids' tablets (including an Apple iPad) to find the best tablet for kids. We kept safety issues in mind, how the tablets adapted for older kids, whether an Android tablet or other operating-system mattered, and how the devices might interact with existing gadgets parents might already own.

Using criteria such as ease of use, intuitiveness, app and game quality, durability, and audio and video performance, we found the best tablet for kids is the Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Edition (10th Gen) (available at Amazon) , whether you're looking for a device for younger kids or one for older kids.

A child holding an Amazon Fire HD Kids edition showing an illustration on the screen.
Credit: Reviewed / Lisa Lawrence

The Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids edition is easy to use and comes with lots of free content.

Best Overall
Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Edition (10th Gen)

We found Amazon’s 10th generation Fire HD 8 tablet to be the best tablet for kids. It’s easy to set up, simple to use and comes with so many pre-installed apps and videos it would take some time for your child to grow tired of it.

The Fire HD 10 came in at a very close second to the Fire HD 8, because they are pretty much the same device. The major difference is the 10 has a bigger screen size (10.1-inch HD vs. 8-inch HD) that may be unwieldy for kids with small hands. Another difference is the 8 has more space for a Micro SD slot (up to 400GB of additional storage, versus 256GB in the 10). For comparison, the Fire 7 has a 7-inch display (it’s not HD) and its most recent release includes 512GB of additional storage via a MicroSD slot.

The best thing about the Fire tablet is how stocked it is with easily accessible, ad-free, and fun content. Each Fire tablet comes with one year of Amazon Kids+. Basically, it provides access to more than 13,000 apps, games, videos, books and other content from PBS Kids, Disney and more (don't worry, it's not all downloaded on the tablet when you first get it). After a year, users pay a monthly fee for FreeTime. At present, pricing begins at $5.99 per month.

In contrast, the Apple iPad comes with no pre-installed apps or games and most free apps contain ads that children inadvertently tap on, leading them to the app store. Free apps also only contain a few aspects of the game at the free rate before asking to be purchased. This is frustrating for kids and annoying for parents.

There are different accounts for parent and child, and a passcode is required to enter the parent’s account. The parental controls are robust and allow you to limit your child's screen time and what he or she can play. It took us a few minutes to figure out how to change the parental controls—you have to be signed in to the parent's account and not the child's—but once we did, we liked that they could be adjusted based on the age of each child. Having the ability to set an age-range for each child's individual account (as opposed to the overall device), was a big plus when siblings are sharing one device.

Our kids figured out how to use the device right away—faster than their parents did, to be honest—and they were reading and playing games in just a matter of minutes. There are loads of books available through Amazon Kids+, and we liked how easy it was for the kids to find appropriate reading material with just a quick search.

If you're planning to use the Fire HD 8 for watching videos or listening to music (parent-approved, of course), you'll be pleased with the quality of both the sound and the picture. We cued up our annual viewing of "It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown", and were pleasantly surprised at how crisp the picture looked, despite the show being a classic (AKA old, and not in HD!).

Also a plus: the squishy bumper case that is included with each Fire HD 8 Kids Edition, and the fact that it uses a USB-C connection instead of the micro USB ones that our older Kindles use. The USB-C is much easier to plug into the device—there's no wrong way to insert it—and it charges a heck of a lot faster, which is always a plus when it comes to impatient children.

The biggest con of the Fire HD 8 Kids Edition—and it's a big one—is that beginning readers can't follow along with their finger in the books they are reading, because it causes the screen to move. While this isn't an issue if you have older children who are past needing to point to words or sounds with their fingers, it was very frustrating for our 6-year-old.

Pros

  • Easy to use

  • Case is included

  • Long battery life

Cons

  • Kids can't follow along with their finger while reading

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How We Tested Tablets for Kids

The Tester

Hi, I'm Anna Lane, Reviewed's Parenting Editor and "professional mom". I was a stand-up comedian and freelance writer for many years before joining the staff at Reviewed. I live in Los Angeles with my husband and our two children: a son who is seven-and-a-half, and a daughter who is six. Yes, they are 18 months apart, and no, it was not planned that way. My reviews are informed by my life as a working mom who wishes she had the ability to be in two places at once. I enjoy helping other overwhelmed, exhausted parents find the answers to such burning parenting questions as: Which subscription kits are the most fun? What's the best nerf gun? Why does my child always tell me about important class projects the night before? For this last query, I have no good answer. In our most recent round of testing, my kids and I evaluated the new Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids edition, as well as the Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids edition. This guide was first written by Georgia Kral, whose bio follows.

Hi, I’m Georgia Kral. In my career as a journalist, I’ve reported on many topics, from restaurants and food to parenting and education. I live in Brooklyn with my husband and two kids. Our daughter is a couple of months shy of four and has been interested in phones and tablets (all screens, to be honest) since she was about one. We held out for as long as possible before we reached for an old iPad, put a thick, plastic cover on it and downloaded some games for kids when she was about two years old. Her younger brother, who is a few months shy of 2, watches television with his big sister but is not developmentally ready for tablets. We were wary of introducing screen time (the World Health Organization recommends screen time to be limited to one hour per day, beginning at age two), but in the media-obsessed and technologically driven age that we live in, it’s impossible to avoid it. This assignment gave me the opportunity to really study what’s best for my kids.

The Tests

We tested each of the tablets for about three days. First, we set up the tablets, which includes charging, establishing accounts and setting up a separate child account. Depending on the device, we then downloaded apps and set up parental controls. The ease of navigating the interface of the tablet, from how intuitively it worked (or didn’t work) to how difficult it was to set up the child’s account and restrictions, played a large role in where the tablet appears in our rankings.

Next, we checked the basics on how each device worked: we measured audio and video quality, touch screen sensitivity, how many hours of battery life, ease of connecting with Bluetooth and WiFi, and quality of the design.

Lastly, our kids performed their own tests. We gauged their interest in the pre-installed and downloaded apps, how easily they were able to navigate and use the tablet and how quickly they lost interest in it. We took notes each time they used a tablet and wrote about our experiences after each test.

What You Should Know About Kids Tablets

What About an Apple iPad or iPad Mini?

Kid-friendly covers help protect Apple iPads.
Credit: Reviewed / Jackson Ruckar

We evaluated whether adding a kid-friendly cover to a hand-me-down iPad may be a good option instead of buying a separate tablet designed specifically for children.

As I mentioned, the first tablet my daughter used was a hand-me-down-iPad. This is likely true for others. There are obvious benefits to this tactic. It’s free, it’s already set up and you, the parent/caregiver, already know how to use it. But there are downsides to iPad’s too, mainly that the parental controls just aren’t comparable to tablets made especially for kids.

With an iPad, you can’t set up a separate child’s account making it difficult to limit the device to only kid-friendly content. You can, however, set up your child with their own Apple ID, which allows you to control (somewhat) what they may be doing on another Apple device and try to stick to child-friendly apps and websites. This is called Family Sharing. For the purposes of this testing, that didn’t help, since it's usually only older kids who might have access to their own cellular devices. So if you give your kid an iPad, make sure you wipe it of all social networking and content apps. We took YouTube and even YouTube Kids off of ours because trust me, you don’t know what they could get into. And even if it’s harmless content, some YouTube videos aimed at kids bring out a scary level of addiction in children. (Not to mention the bizarre trend of YouTube videos featuring popular characters in not-so-innocent storylines.)

We decided to test an iPad anyway, as a benchmark for the rest of the tablets. In our rankings, it came out in the middle, below the Amazon Fire Kids Edition tablets and the Samsung, but above the LeapFrogs and others. There is no doubt the iPad is well designed and that it works very well. But we also tested a brand new device, and that’s not what most people will be giving their preschoolers.

What to Consider When Buying a Kids Tablet

An important consideration when choosing a tablet is the operating system it runs on, and what companies, if any, are already linked. For example, if the parents or caregivers use Apple products, a Samsung or other device that runs on Android software may not initially be as desirable. Along similar lines, the Amazon Fire tablets are linked with your Amazon Prime account, which makes managing them very simple if you use Prime regularly. These considerations did not affect our rankings, as everyone uses different products in their lives.

For me, I use Apple products: iPhone, MacBook, etc. And while the Android devices gave me some pause, I was able to use them with little effort and enjoyed them more than just giving my children an old iPad.

Another consideration is whether you want a tablet that comes ready to use or one that needs to be set up with apps and content first. The Amazon Fire tablets all came pre-installed with lots of apps, games and more. I have a Prime account and linking it with the tablet was extremely simple. The Samsung, on the other hand, had to be registered first before the Samsung Kids portion of the device could be enabled.

The age of your child also comes into play. An iPad is better suited to an older child who will be able to appreciate its quality and may be less in need of assistance when it comes to downloading apps. The Fire and Samsung tablets are good for all ages as the apps that are available span age ranges.


Other Kids Tablets We Tested

Product image of Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids Edition (9th Gen)
Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids Edition (9th Gen)

The Fire HD 10 Kids Edition is the newest iteration of Amazon’s popular tablet. With a 10.1-inch screen, this is a big tablet. While that might be an advantage for older kids, younger screentime lovers are likely to find it too unwieldy to carry around. We love that it comes with a colourful bumper case that protects the actual tablet from any damage—a real selling point considering my 5-year-old dropped it mere hours after it arrived.

It is worth noting, however, that the Fire HD 10 offers less storage than the Fire HD 8, which can be annoying if you have kids who like to stock their tablets with a huge variety of games. It’s easy enough to delete items in order to free up more space, but what busy parent has the time for that?

As with the 8, the 10 includes a free year of Amazon Kids+, and my first-grader really enjoyed the selection of books tailored to his reading level.

Another new feature of the Kindle HD 10 Kids Edition is that it has a USB-C connection, as opposed to the micro USB that came standard on older models. This gives the device the ability to charge much faster, and it’s less liable to break easily—both pluses when it comes to a tablet geared towards children.

Pros

  • Large screen

  • Colorful bumper case protects device

  • Charges quickly

Cons

  • Too big for little kids

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Product image of Amazon Fire 7 Kids Edition (2019)
Amazon Fire 7 Kids Edition (2019)

Just as we finished up testing, Amazon released its 2019 version of the Fire 7 Kids Edition. It has additional space via a MicroSD (512GB instead of 256GB), a faster processor, and a cover that now includes a built-in stand. Besides pink and blue, the device is now available in purple, too. But otherwise, we're pretty sure it's similar to the product we tested.

The biggest reason the previous version of the Fire 7 we tested fell in our scoring is it felt slightly outdated in comparison to the 8 and 10. The screen is not HD (and neither is the new version) and its touchscreen was a bit less responsive, which for young children who are just learning about patience can be a dealbreaker. Fortunately, the apps and features are all still the same as the 8 and 10, which is why the Fire 7 remains in the top half of our list. It's also more affordable than the Fire 8 and 10 so if you'd rather spend a little less and sacrifice a little quality, this is a great option.

Pros

  • Supports MicroSD for additional space

  • Affordable

  • Expansive app suite

Cons

  • Screen is not HD

  • Less responsive touch screen

Buy now at Amazon
Product image of LeapFrog LeapPad Ultimate
LeapFrog LeapPad Ultimate

The Ultimate tablet is solidly built; the body is extremely hard plastic (no case needed) and the glass over the screen is shatterproof, according to the company, but the tablet itself is hard to use, confusing and counterintuitive.

I had so much trouble navigating it that I didn’t think my daughter would be able to use it at all. This proved to be true. She attempted to use some of the apps and games but disregarded it rather quickly. When I attempted to use it I found that many of the games required parental guidance. While the tablet is for kids ages 3 to 6, many of the apps required kids to either listen to directions and wait or read in order to play something. I would guess that most children that young don’t have the patience for that, or can’t read yet.

Pros

  • Solidly built

  • Shatterproof glass screen

Cons

  • Difficult to use

  • Not ideal for kids who can't read yet

Buy now at Amazon
Product image of Dragon Touch K8
Dragon Touch K8

The DragonTouch runs on the Android operating system. While this device had a nice handle to carry it around with that also bends to allow it to be propped up on a surface, it was difficult and ultimately frustrating to use. The navigation is clunky and the entire system is slow to respond to touch commands.

DragonTouch uses the platform Kidoz, which collects games, videos and more and features fairly decent parent controls that allow you to choose which apps (YouTube, Google Play store, etc.) appear on the child’s profile and also how long they can use the tablet for. The pre-installed apps did not excite my daughter, but downloading from the Google Play store was not difficult. The biggest problem with the DragonTouch is how counterintuitive the navigation is.

Pros

  • Carrying handle turns into a stand

  • Apps can be found in the Google Play store

  • Solid parental controls

Cons

  • Slow and clunky navigation

  • Pre-installed apps aren't that great

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Meet the testers

Georgia Kral

Georgia Kral

Contributor

@georgiakral

In her career as a journalist, Kral has reported on topics ranging from restaurants and food to parenting and education. She lives in Montclair, N.J., with her husband and two children.

See all of Georgia Kral's reviews
Anna Lane

Anna Lane

Freelance writer

@theannalane

Anna Lane was Reviewed's parenting editor, covering topics related to pregnancy, babies, toddlers, big kids, tweens, teens and beyond. She has a son and a daughter who she often uses to help test products in order to get their unfiltered reviews.

Prior to joining Reviewed, Lane worked as a freelance writer and editor. Her published bylines include The Washington Post, Refinery29, Playboy, and Romper, among others. A graduate of New York University, Lane previously worked as a touring stand-up comedian, entertaining audiences throughout the United States.

See all of Anna Lane's reviews

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