Foster creative play with colourful toy trains
Children love using colourful toy trains to dream up adventures: sometimes it’s a busy day at the station, other times it’s a race across the living room floor. Kids love figuring out how to connect the tracks together and watch their trains chug along the routes they’ve built.
Wooden loops and push-along sets are easy for little hands and quick to set up. Motorised character engines bring sound and movement that make playtime lively; remember to keep a few batteries spare. Starter hobby layouts have extra pieces, letting older kids build bigger tracks and show off what they’ve made.
Start with a simple loop, then add bridges, tunnels, stations, or extra engines as your child gets curious about new challenges.
With sets from brands like Thomas & Friends, Fisher‑Price and Brio, kids can snap tracks together, send trains on different routes, and rearrange everything as often as they like. If you stick with one brand or system, like Thomas & Friends or Brio, adding new pieces is straightforward.
Most wooden tracks are quick to set up, but bigger stations or bridges might take a few extra steps; the instructions usually have a handy guide. Some sets come with scenery like trees or buildings, so kids can turn the floor into a busy railway town. Building a railway track together is a great way to talk about how trains work and help your child practise fine motor skills.
Many toy train sets look like classic trains and let kids try out different track designs, learning through trial and error as they play. As kids build their own train lines, they discover how to join tracks and love seeing their trains tackle twists, turns, and bridges.
Compact train tables—usually less than a metre wide—make tidying up easy and help avoid losing any pieces between playtimes. At family gatherings, setting up a toy train set keeps kids busy and gets everyone working together to build the biggest track in the room.
These toy trains are made from sturdy, safe materials, so they’ll be able to survive crashes and drops. Kids can pick sets with dinosaurs, big stations, or even the London Underground—there’s a theme for every kind of train fan.