Bible Craft Kit Subscription Boxes: What to Look For

Posted by Scripture Crafts | Bible Activities for Families

Subscription boxes for Christian families have grown significantly over the last few years — and for good reason. A monthly box that arrives at your door removes the planning burden and keeps faith-based activities happening consistently, even during busy seasons.

But not all Bible craft subscriptions are built the same. Before you commit to a monthly charge, here's what to evaluate.

What makes a good Bible craft subscription

1. Everything should be included

This sounds obvious, but it's worth checking carefully. Some kits include craft directions but expect you to source your own supplies. Others include supplies but not the Bible story content. The best kits ship complete — supplies, story, and instructions — so you can open the box and start immediately without a trip to the store.

2. The craft should be tied to a specific Bible story

There's a meaningful difference between a kit themed around "courage" or "faith" and a kit built around the specific story of David and Goliath or Noah's Ark.

When a craft is tied to a named story, kids connect the physical activity to the narrative. They remember the story because of what they built, and they remember what they built because of the story. That loop is what creates lasting retention. Generic themes don't create the same anchor.

3. Age-appropriateness matters more than you think

A kit designed for ages 3–12 is often designed for no one in particular. Age-specific kits — or kits with a clear target range — tend to be more engaging because the story framing, the craft complexity, and the discussion prompts are calibrated for where kids actually are developmentally.

For children ages 5–10, you want craft instructions they can follow with minimal adult help, stories told at a level that holds attention without being dumbed down, and activities that produce something they're proud of.

4. Time commitment should be realistic

The best Bible craft subscriptions are designed for real family life — weeknights, limited attention spans, competing schedules. A kit that takes 90 minutes to complete is one that sits in a pile until you "have time," which means it never gets done.

Look for kits that can be completed in 20–30 minutes. That's enough time for a meaningful activity without requiring a cleared calendar.

5. Subscription pricing should reflect savings

If a subscription costs the same as buying individual kits, there's no incentive to subscribe. A good Bible craft subscription should offer a meaningful discount over the one-time price — and it should be easy to pause or cancel without jumping through hoops.

What's available right now

Scripture Crafts (coming soon) One-time kits are currently available at $24.99 each at scripturecrafts.store. A monthly subscription launching soon will offer the same kits at a discounted rate — each month featuring a new Bible story with all supplies included. Kids ages 5–10. No prep. 20-minute activity.

"The David and Goliath craft had my kids excited and engaged in the word of God and they had a blast while doing it!" — Taylor, Pennsylvania

WITH Families Monthly subscription available at withfamilies.co. Broader in scope — each box includes four weeks of devotionals, conversation cards, and craft supplies around a theme. $39.99/month. Ages 3–12. Best for families who want a full monthly discipleship program rather than a single story activity.

Etsy sellers Several independent creators on Etsy offer Bible craft subscriptions, with quality varying significantly. Worth exploring if you're looking for something niche or handmade, but vet reviews carefully before subscribing.

Questions to ask before subscribing

  • Is the Bible story connection explicit or just thematic?

  • Are all supplies included, or do I need to add anything?

  • What age range is it actually designed for?

  • How long does each activity take?

  • What's the discount vs. buying one-time?

  • How easy is it to pause or cancel?

Should you subscribe or buy one-time first?

If you've never done a Bible craft kit with your family, buying one kit first makes sense. It lets you test the format with your kids — whether they engage, how long it actually takes, whether the story-craft connection works for your family — before committing to a monthly charge.

If you already know your family enjoys this kind of activity and you want the consistency of a monthly delivery (plus the savings), a subscription is the better long-term value.

Scripture Crafts one-time kits are available now at $24.99. When the subscription launches, subscribers will pay less per kit and receive a new Bible story every month automatically. Join the waitlist or browse kits →

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How to Use Crafts to Start Bible Conversations With Your Kids