Published: May 25, 2026

My grandfather taught me to fish when I was seven. I don't remember a single thing about the fish. I remember his hands on the rod, the way he whistled when he was concentrating, and the red thermos of coffee he always brought. That was 40 years ago. The coffee is long gone, but the connection isn't.

Being a grandparent is one of the richest chapters of life. It's also one that has changed more in the last ten years than in the fifty before them. Grandchildren today grow up with tablets before they can walk, and many live hundreds or thousands of miles away. The good news: staying close has never been easier once you know which tools actually work and which ones just add frustration.

This guide walks you through the best ways to connect with grandchildren of any age, whether they're in the next room or the next time zone. No jargon, no overwhelm — just practical things you can start doing today.

Best Apps and Devices for Connecting with Grandchildren

You don't need to become a tech wizard. You need maybe two or three things that work reliably. Here are the ones worth your time, grouped by what they do best.

Video Calling (Face-to-Face, Even From Afar)

Zoom — Free for calls up to 40 minutes. Works on phones, tablets, and computers. Most grandchildren already have it installed. You can schedule recurring calls so nobody forgets. The screen is big enough on a tablet to see faces clearly.

FaceTime — Built into every Apple device. If you and your grandchild both have iPhones or iPads, it's the simplest option because there's nothing to install. The call quality is consistently good.

WhatsApp — Free video calling that works across Apple and Android. Popular if your grandchildren live outside the United States. Also good for quick text messages and photo sharing.

Tip: Set up a standing weekly call — same day, same time. It becomes a routine rather than something everyone has to remember to schedule. Sunday afternoons work well for most families.

Apps That Let You Stay in Touch Without Syncing Schedules

Marco Polo — Think of it as a video walkie-talkie. You record a short video message, send it, and your grandchild watches and replies when they have time. No scheduling, no pressure. It's especially popular with grandparents because the messages don't disappear — you can rewatch them anytime.

FamilyAlbum — A private photo-sharing app where only invited family members can see and comment on pictures. Parents upload photos of the grandkids, and you get notified. No social media, no strangers. Several grandparents told us checking FamilyAlbum is the highlight of their morning coffee.

Best Tablets for Seniors Who Want Things Simple

If setting up devices makes you want to throw them out the window, here are your best bets:

What to Look for When Choosing a Device for Staying in Touch

Before you buy anything, walk through this checklist. It'll save you money and headaches.

Screen Size

Anything smaller than 8 inches gets cramped during video calls, especially if you're showing grandkids around the room or they're showing you a school project. A 10-inch screen is the sweet spot — big enough to see faces clearly, small enough to hold comfortably.

Speaker Quality

If you have any hearing loss (and most of us do by 65), a device with front-facing speakers makes a real difference. The Echo Show 10 and the larger iPads both do well here. Budget tablets often put speakers on the back, which muffles sound. Read reviews specifically about speaker quality before buying.

Setup Complexity

The honest truth: most tablets assume you already know how to set them up. If technology frustrates you, the GrandPad or Echo Show are worth the extra cost because they remove setup entirely. An iPad is more capable but requires more initial effort. Choose based on your patience level, not the feature list.

Monthly Cost vs. One-Time Cost

GrandPad charges about $40/month but includes cellular data (no WiFi needed) and live support. An iPad is a one-time purchase but you'll need WiFi. Figure out which model fits your budget and comfort level — there's no wrong answer.

Fun Activities to Do with Grandchildren — In Person and Remote

The best activities aren't elaborate. They're things you both actually enjoy, repeated often enough to become traditions.

For Toddlers and Young Children (Ages 2–6)

For School-Age Children (Ages 7–12)

For Teenagers (Ages 13+)

Tip: The activity matters less than the attention. A 15-minute video call where you're fully present beats an hour where you're half-watching TV. Grandchildren feel the difference.

Building a Bond When You Live Nearby

Living close brings its own opportunities — and its own challenges. The biggest mistake nearby grandparents make is waiting to be invited. Don't.

Create a regular rhythm. "Every Wednesday after school" or "Saturday morning pancakes." Kids thrive on predictability, and so do relationships. Having a standing date takes the pressure off both sides — nobody has to propose it, nobody has to decline.

Have a project. Building a birdhouse. Growing tomatoes. Restoring an old piece of furniture. Kids learn more from working alongside you than from being lectured. Plus, you'll have something to show for it at the end.

Go to their things. Soccer games. School plays. Piano recitals. You don't have to attend everything — that's exhausting and probably unwanted. But showing up to the big ones, consistently, over years? That's how a child knows they matter to you.

Respect your children's parenting. This is the hardest one. You raised your kids a certain way. Your kids may be raising theirs differently. Unless a child is in danger, your role is support, not override. Bite your tongue, offer help when asked, and be the safe adult they can always count on — not the one with constant opinions about screen time and bedtimes.

Navigating Difficult Family Dynamics

Not every grandparent-grandchild relationship is straightforward. Divorce, estrangement, distance, and disagreements all complicate things. Here's what helps:

Focus on the child, not the conflict. If there's tension with your adult child or their spouse, keep your attention on the grandchild. Send cards for birthdays and holidays directly to the child. Make it clear that your relationship with them doesn't depend on your relationship with their parents.

Respect boundaries, even when it hurts. If a parent says "no gifts with screens" or "no visits longer than an hour," follow those rules without pushback. The fastest way to lose access is to argue about the terms of access.

Consider mediated communication. Some families use apps like OurFamilyWizard, which were designed for co-parenting but work well for any family with communication challenges. It keeps everything documented and reduces misunderstandings.

Grandparents' rights. In some situations, legal options exist. Every state handles this differently. If you've been cut off from grandchildren after a divorce or death in the family, a family law attorney can tell you what's possible. This is a last resort, not a first step — but it's worth knowing about.

Best Gifts for Grandchildren That Aren't Just More Stuff

The toy pile is already a mountain. Consider gifts that create time together instead:

Taking Care of Yourself So You Can Show Up for Them

You can't pour from an empty cup. Grandparenting is joyful, but it's also tiring — especially if you're providing regular childcare. Protect your own health so you can keep showing up.

Know your limits. If you're providing daily childcare, be honest about how many hours you can sustain. It's better to do two solid days a week than five exhausted ones. Talk to your adult children early, before burnout sets in.

Stay physically active. Keeping up with grandchildren requires mobility, balance, and stamina. Regular walking, chair exercises, or balance training help. SilverStrength Club has guides on all of these — start with our balance exercises program or chair yoga routine.

Find your own social circle. Your grandchildren need a grandparent who has their own life, their own friends, their own interests. It makes you more interesting to them, and it keeps you from pinning all your social needs on a seven-year-old. Look into senior social groups in your area.

Give yourself credit. The simple fact that you're reading this guide means you're a grandparent who cares about showing up well. That already puts you ahead of most. Don't compare yourself to Instagram grandparents. Your grandchildren don't need Pinterest-worthy activities — they need you.

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