Simple Magic! Fun Tricks Kids Can Do & Revealed Secrets!
Are you thinking, “Doing magic looks difficult”? In fact, anyone can easily perform amazing tricks using everyday items like rubber bands, tissues, and balloons.
You don’t need to be especially dexterous, either.
What really matters is just knowing a few simple tips.
In this article, we’ll introduce a variety of easy magic tricks that require little preparation and can be performed right away.
Try casually showing them off at parties or gatherings to liven up the event!
- With Explanations: Easy Magic Tricks for Lower-Grade Elementary School Children — How to Do Simple Tricks
- Magic you can do using only your hands—no props needed! Perfect to perform at school.
- Super easy magic tricks kids can do! Fun tricks you can play right away
- [Easy] Magic tricks that will liven up the classroom: Recommended tricks you can do even during recess
- Simple magic tricks using stationery: recommended tricks for parties and performances
- [Easy] Rubber Band Magic Tricks Collection [Party Entertainment / Performances]
- A roundup of finger tricks: magic you can do using just your fingertips.
- Easy! Magic tricks that liven up a Christmas party. Simple tricks and their secrets revealed.
- Hilarious magic! Crowd-pleasing tricks perfect for parties and performances
- Simple magic tricks that delight kids: surprising to watch and make you want to try them yourself.
- [For Elementary School Students] Simple and Amazing! Magic Tricks You Can Do with a Handkerchief
- [Coin, Cards, Pen, etc.] Compilation of Magic Tricks Where Objects Disappear
- [For Upper Grades] Simple Magic Tricks for Elementary School Students: Astonishing and Impressive Magic
Simple Magic Tricks with Everyday Items (1–10)
Magic where legs disappear

It’s a magic trick where you cover your feet with a black cloth, give a signal, and when you lift the cloth, the feet that should be there have vanished.
The key point is the angle at which you show the gaps in the cloth, and the mechanism is simple: you’re just moving your feet to a position where they can’t be seen.
You place your weight on the leg pulled back, lift the other leg up, and keep your body position unchanged, so your ability to maintain posture is tested.
Let’s proceed while balancing mystery and ease: figure out how low you can lower your foot to make it look like it has disappeared.
A magic trick where a bill passes through a spoon

It’s a magic trick where you sharply strike the crease of a folded bill with a spoon, the spoon appears to pierce through the bill, but when you remove the spoon and unfold the bill, it’s back to normal.
You prepare two spoons, hold them slightly offset so the back spoon sticks out, and place the folded bill between them.
By pressing the front spoon against the inside of the crease, the back spoon sticks out farther and becomes visible first, making it look as though it pierced the bill.
To avoid revealing that you’re holding two spoons, it’s best to use plain, flat spoons with minimal decoration.
Potato Chips Switcheroo Magic

This is a magic trick where you hold a potato chips tube behind a paper bag to signal a change, and it swaps with a different flavor tube that was supposedly inside the bag.
You use two types of tubes, and you prepare a gimmick in advance on one of them, so be mindful of how you present it to avoid giving anything away.
The preparation involves attaching the outer label of a different flavor to half of the tube, so it’s important to remove and handle it in a way that doesn’t reveal the back half, along with a smooth wrist turn.
To prevent the gimmick from being discovered, it’s also a good idea to clean up quickly after performing the trick.
A magic trick where a pair of disposable chopsticks pierces through a handkerchief

It’s a magic trick where it looks like a chopstick forcefully pierces a handkerchief, but when you pull the chopstick out and unfold the handkerchief, there isn’t a single hole.
The secret is that when it seemed to go through, the chopstick was actually positioned in front of the handkerchief, merely creating the illusion of penetration.
You shape the handkerchief as if it were wrapped around the chopstick—using the chopstick at that stage—then use your fingertips to bring only the chopstick forward from there.
The key points are forming the handkerchief in a way that doesn’t reveal the chopstick’s movement and handling everything smoothly.
A ring that, once removed, instantly returns to your finger.

It’s a magic trick where a ring that should have been removed right in front of you appears back on the finger in an instant—as if it teleported through the air and settled onto the finger.
For a moment, you can’t quite tell what happened, but the secret is surprising once you know it.
The ring is on the index finger; while you cover that finger with your left hand, you bend the index finger and extend the middle finger, which has nothing on it.
Making it look like the swap happens mid-throw takes a bit of practice.
Magic where candy comes out of a tissue

It’s a magic trick where you crumple a tissue that should be empty—just taken from the box—and, after a little “incantation,” candy appears from inside.
You clearly show that there’s nothing in your hands, and you use a tissue taken straight from the box, which really heightens the mystery.
In reality, behind the tissue you’re about to take, there’s a pre-crumpled tissue with candy hidden inside.
As you pull out the first tissue, you also secretly bring that crumpled tissue into your hand at the same time.
The key points are the overall angles and how you move your hands so that no one realizes the crumpled tissue has been placed there.
Magic where sweets come out of a paper cup

This is a magic trick where you signal to a paper cup that seemed empty—even when turned upside down—and when you turn it over again, candy appears.
In fact, the paper cup has a slit, and when you first turn it over, you press on the slit to keep the candy from coming out.
Since the candy is inside from the start, when you first turn the cup over, present it as empty by tilting it at an angle that hides the contents.
Smooth hand movements that don’t reveal you’re operating the gimmick are also an important point.



