5 Fun Halloween Math Activities for Middle School
This is your sign to add a little spooky to math class without adding work to your plate. I rounded up fun Halloween math activities for middle school that take minutes to prep and still sharpen math skills. Use them with small groups, whole-class review, or morning work. Keep reading for quick directions, teacher tips, and a free Halloween math activity at the end.
1) Halloween Escape Room: Haunted Mansion
Your class “enters” a creepy haunted house and solves puzzles to escape room-by-room—perfect for number sense, basic operations, place value, and whole numbers practice, or you can use the 8th grade version for all things equations and more. Students collaborate in small groups, show their thinking on a recording sheet, and race to unlock the next “door.” It’s a great way to build critical thinking and social skills without losing the content.
You can use either the printable version (see one of the stations/rooms pictured below) or the Google Form version.
Classroom Tips
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Set the vibe with dim lights and a spooky haunted house sounds video on YouTube.
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Give teams/students a few pieces of candy when they crack a clue.
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Great for a Friday block or the day of your Halloween party.
Try it:
- Halloween Math Review Digital Escape Room (6th–7th Grade Math Number Sense) Works well for 8th-grade math intervention, too!
- Halloween Math Review Digital Escape Room (8th Grade Math—Equations & Square Roots) Works for Algebra intervention and high school students who need a confidence boost.
“Students loved this as a quick review on a hectic day of Halloween activities.” — Kennedy S.
2) Halloween Early Finishers — Equations Pack
When your early birds finish, keep them learning without noise. This print-and-go set mixes logic, a word search, a color-by-code, and a maze, so middle schoolers get quiet practice on equations and math facts while you circulate.
Try it: Halloween Early Finishers Activities — Middle School Math: Equations
How I Use It
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Use one page as morning work all week.
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Add the rest to a fast-finisher bin so your math class never runs out of things to do
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Pair with your other fun resources or math worksheets for quick test prep spirals.
3) Grave Mistakes — Error Analysis for Fractions, Integers, Order of Operations
Students play “teacher” and hunt for the grave mistake, fix it, then write a quick tip for next time. You’ll see real thinking on fractions, integers, order of operations, and common word problems, which makes it a great activity for formative checks and critical thinking practice in 6th, 7th, and 8th grade math. Run it in small groups, individually, or as a whole class.
Try it: Halloween Math Activities — Fractions, Integers, Order of Operations: Grave Mistakes
4) Pixel Art Set: Self-Checking Equation Practice (Great for Bell Work + Centers)
If you want something calm, visual, and self-checking, pixel art is your BFF. Students type solutions; correct answers auto-reveal a Halloween picture. The best part is that there is a joke in the picture too! These are perfect as bell work, math stations, or just independent work!
They’re also a sneaky way to get in great practice on math equations with middle schoolers who “don’t like worksheets,” even though these are technically math worksheets—they just feel like a game.
Start with a freebie: Distributive Property Pixel Art (FREE worksheet + pixel art)—fantastic for 6th–8th.
Love the self-checking vibe and quick wins? Grab the Equations Pixel Art Halloween bundle to get multiple skills in one place, so your lesson plans write themselves this time of year.
5) Ghosts in the Graveyard: Editable Review Game Template
This is the fun Halloween math game I pull out every year. You add your own math problems—anything from order of operations and coordinate points to multi-step word problems—and students “haunt” tombstones to rack up points.
It’s a fun way to review during this time of year, and it plays beautifully with small groups or the entire class. Also amazing for cross-content review (social studies, general science) because it’s fully editable.
Play it: Halloween Review Game Template: Ghosts in the Graveyard
Why teachers keep it on repeat:
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“Loved using this in my middle school classroom.” — Staccy K.
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“My students absolutely loved using this for review… they stayed engaged until the end to see points.” — Bylly Jo M.
Ready to try one?
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Escape Room (6th–7th): Number Sense
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Escape Room (8th): Equations & Square Roots
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Editable Review Game: Ghosts in the Graveyard
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Pixel Art (FREE): Distributive Property
- Pixel Art Bundle: Equations Pixel Art Halloween bundle
Low prep, high engagement, real learning. That’s the goal. Use the escape room for energy, pixel art for calm practice, Ghosts in the Graveyard for review, and Grave Mistakes for error analysis. Grab the early finisher pack so fast workers stay on task, then print the free activity for a quick win tomorrow.
















