7 Best Interactive Virtual Exhibits for Children in 2025 (Ranked by Educators)

Here’s the thing: not all virtual exhibits are created equal. Some are clunky digital slideshows wearing a museum costume.

Others? They pull kids in. They’re interactive, creative, and — most importantly — they teach something real while still being fun.

The Smithsonian Virtual Explorer tops the list, hands down. It’s smart, it’s built for kids, and it turns eontology and oceanography into something kids want to explore.

Not far behind are NASA’s Mars Habitat, the British Museum’s History Threads, and a handful of others that go way beyond just showing information — they let kids experiment, play, and get their hands virtually dirty.

I talked to educators across the country — urban, rural, and everywhere in between — and asked one simple question: Which virtual exhibits work for kids?

Not just the ones that look fancy, but the ones that stick. What follows is their ranked list, plus why each one matters.

Key Takeaways

Exhibit Name Best For Ages Key Subjects Special Feature
Smithsonian Virtual Explorer 8–13 Natural History Adaptive voiceovers, fossil zoom tools
NASA Mars Habitat 10–15 Space Science, STEM Role-play + real rover data
British Museum History Threads 7–12 Social Studies, History Comic storytelling, cuneiform activities
Monterey Bay Ocean Lab 6–11 Marine Biology, Ecology Live cam feeds + ecosystem sim games
The Met Kids Studio 6–12 Art, Creativity Time travel art tours + animation tools
Field Museum Anthropology Hub 9–14 World Cultures, Civics Culture Passport + offline mode
Children’s Museum Climate Lab 7–13 Climate, Environment Future simulator + kid scientist features

1. Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History – Virtual Explorer Platform

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History featuring an elephant statue and visitors
Source: Youtube/Screenshot, The real standout? Their new “Deep Time” zone.

Top Age Group: 8–13

Why it’s #1: You get the whole Smithsonian experience without the field trip chaos.

They’ve taken their entire rotunda and turned it into an interactive map. Kids can navigate with a simple interface — no keyboard gymnastics required — and select exhibits from fossils to ocean life.

What Educators Love

  • Zoomed-in fossil tools let kids examine bone texture like junior paleontologists.
  • Pop-up quizzes appear naturally while exploring, not just after.
  • AI voiceovers adjust to the child’s reading level. Smart move.

Tip from A Fifth-Grade Teacher in Des Moines

“Have kids compare the dinosaur skulls to animals they know. It opens up great conversations about evolution without the big lecture.”

2. NASA’s Virtual Mars Habitat Experience


Top Age Group: 10–15

Why it stands out: You’re not just watching Mars. You’re living there.

Students enter a simulated Mars base and take on roles like mission engineer or botanist. It’s science fiction… but with real science.

It’s also multilingual, offering versions in English, Spanish, and even Mandarin.

Key Features

  • Interactive “what-if” scenarios (solar flare? your food supply just got zapped. Now what?)
  • Real data from rovers is built into the experience.
  • Strong STEM tie-ins for teachers planning curriculum units.

Smart Use in The Classroom

Pair this with a project on sustainable living or climate change. Let kids propose upgrades to the Mars base, grounded in actual scientific principles.

3. The British Museum’s History Threads for Kids

Image of an ancient statue displayed in the British Museum as part of the history Threads for kids exhibit
Source: Youtube/Screenshot, The new “Threads” exhibit links artifacts through stories

Top Age Group: 7–12

Strength: Social studies finally made interactive — and no, it’s not just about kings and queens.

Their new “Threads” exhibit connects artifacts through stories. Say a child clicks on a clay tablet from Mesopotamia.

That tablet links to a modern-day map, a short comic about a Sumerian kid, and a writing activity where kids try out cuneiform themselves.

Why Educators Are Impressed

  • It’s genuinely multicultural — not a token nod.
  • The tech works smoothly, even on Chromebooks.
  • There’s a teacher backend that shows engagement stats.

And yes, Amish kids? Some schools in conservative areas use this exhibit in controlled settings, thanks to its low-friction, no-login-required interface.

4. Monterey Bay Aquarium Virtual Ocean Lab

Top Age Group: 6–11

Aquarium magic, no water splashing required.

This one’s a hit because it doesn’t feel like a digital replica. Instead, it plays to virtual’s strengths — live-feed cams, interactive tide pool touchscreens (okay, not actual touching, but close), and build-your-own-ecosystem games.

What Makes It Click

  • Children can feed virtual sea otters and track their reactions.
  • Eco-systems respond to decisions in real-time. Too much algae? Your kelp forest dies. Harsh lesson, but memorable.
  • Narration by marine biologists who actually sound like real people, not robots.

One librarian in Oregon said it best: “It’s gentle but powerful — kind of like nature itself.”

5. The Met Kids Interactive Studio

Image of children interacting with a digital display at the Met Kids interactive studio
Source: Youtube/Screenshot, Kids can submit art projects based on their exploration

Top Age Group: 6–12

Calling all budding artists and storytellers.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art has always had clout, but in 2025, they nailed the virtual exhibit game for kids.

The Met Kids Studio doesn’t ask children to passively stare at paintings. It asks them to remix, animate, and narrate.

Best Bits

  • “Time Machine” lets kids jump between centuries and see art change through history.
  • Interactive “make your own exhibit” tools.
  • Safe sharing features: kids can submit art projects tied to what they explored.

If your child likes Minecraft or drawing on the iPad, this one hits the same creative nerve — but with more culture.

6. Field Museum’s Virtual Anthropology Hub

@gingerandthefoxes New fear unlocked, big no thanks #dino #dinosaur #jurassic #bird #fieldmuseum #chicago #museum #whatthehell #nottodaysatan @Field Museum ♬ Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (Main Trailer Theme) – Baltic House Orchestra


Top Age Group: 9–14

Deep cultural context with a fun twist.

The Field Museum leaned hard into anthropology, and it works beautifully. Children enter digital recreations of global villages, learning about clothing, food, rituals, and music.

They don’t just click; they collect. There’s a built-in “Culture Passport” where children earn stamps for every completed activity, from weaving patterns in Guatemala to naming ceremonies in Ghana.

Why Teachers Appreciate It

  • Fully accessible in offline mode — handy for areas with limited internet.
  • Content created in collaboration with real communities, not just museum curators.
  • Quizzes are story-based, not trivia-based. Huge difference.

An educator in rural Pennsylvania said it’s the one exhibit that resonates even with students who typically check out of history lessons.

7. National Children’s Museum Climate Lab

Children interacting with a climate-themed digital display at the National Children's Museum climate lab
Source: Youtube/Screenshot, Kids learn about environmental challenges without focusing on negativity

Top Age Group: 7–13

It’s bright, bold, and brutally honest — without being scary.

The Climate Lab walks a tricky tightrope. Kids learn about real environmental challenges, but it doesn’t spiral into doom-and-gloom.

Instead, they get hands-on virtual activities like building sustainable cities or testing biodegradable packaging.

Features that Win Praise

  • Kids design eco-solutions, then see how they perform in the “Simulated Future” mode.
  • A “Kid Scientist Spotlight” section highlights actual children doing real-world sustainability work.
  • Built-in journaling tool to reflect on what they’ve learned and how they feel about it.

If you’ve ever heard a child say, “What can I do? I’m just a kid,” this exhibit answers that with: “Plenty.”

How to Use These in Real Life (Without Burning Out)

You don’t need to structure a whole unit around one exhibit. A few tips from educators who’ve been using these successfully:

  • Pick 1–2 features max per session. Kids can get overwhelmed. Start small.
  • Have a guiding question. Something like “How do animals adapt to cold climates?” can focus exploration.
  • Let them choose paths. Autonomy boosts engagement big time.
  • Use simple reflection prompts. Even just, “What surprised you most?” goes a long way.
  • Mix digital with analog. After a virtual visit, have them draw, build, or write offline.

Final Thoughts

Interactive virtual exhibit in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
Source: Youtube/Screenshot, Virtual exhibits, when done right, aren’t a lesser version — they’re just different

For kids in rural areas, kids with limited mobility, or kids in communities like the Old Order Amish (where traditional education coexists with modern adaptations), these tools unlock something profound: access.

And let’s be honest — even for the rest of us, it’s pretty amazing to watch a child’s face light up when they “feed” a digital otter or find out their Mars greenhouse just sprouted potatoes.

What was once a novelty is now a necessity. The trick is picking the platforms that don’t just entertain, but genuinely educate.