AI for 6-, 7-, and 8-year-olds —
that you can actually hand them.
Xyplor is the only generative-AI creation platform a parent can give a 6-year-old directly at home — with full visibility into every prompt the child sent and every line of code the AI wrote. Built for kids before they read fluently: they talk, tap pictures, and listen.
Built for a kid who can't type yet
Your kid talks; AI builds
Tap the mic and say it out loud — “a game about space dragons.” Xyplor turns speech into the prompt. No typing required.
Your kid taps pictures; AI builds
Pick from picture grids — what to make, about what, what vibe — and Xyplor writes the prompt. Made for pre-fluent readers.
You see everything
Every prompt your child sent and every line of code the AI wrote appears in your parent dashboard. Plus read-aloud so your kid can hear what's on screen.
Concept before tool
Before your kid prompts the AI, they play four short “Sparks” — spotting patterns, predicting what comes next, teaching a pretend robot, and catching the robot being confidently wrong. Then, and only then, they point the AI at the thing they just learned. We teach kids what AI is before we let it build for them.
It's soft and skippable — never a gate in front of the fun.
Safe by construction
- COPPA compliant from day one — no ads, no data selling.
- Kids need a parent-set PIN to get into their profile.
- Creations need parent approval before they can be published.
- Every AI conversation is logged in the parent dashboard.
How it compares for young kids
| Tool | For a kid under 9? |
|---|---|
| Xyplor | Built for ages 6+. Parent-direct, voice + picture prompts, full visibility. |
| ChatGPT | Bars users under 13 in its terms of service. Compare → |
| Khan Academy Kids | Free and well-made for ages 2-8, but no generative creation. Compare → |
| Scratch / ScratchJr | Block coding, no generative AI. Compare → |
| Roblox | Open chat + purchases. Compare → |
Common questions
What is the right AI app for a 6-year-old?
Xyplor is built specifically for kids ages 6 and up. It supports voice input for kids who can't yet type, a picture-based prompt picker for pre-fluent readers, and a parent dashboard that logs every prompt the child sent and every line of code the AI wrote. Most general-purpose AI tools (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Character.AI, Meta AI) bar users under 13 in their consumer terms of service.
Can a 6-year-old use ChatGPT?
No. OpenAI's terms of service require users to be at least 13 years old. Most general-purpose AI assistants (Claude, Gemini, Character.AI, Meta AI) have the same minimum-age requirement. They are not designed for, or permitted to be used by, kids under 13.
How does Xyplor work for a kid who can't read fluently?
Three ways. (1) Voice input: the kid speaks their idea and Xyplor transcribes it into a prompt. (2) Picture prompt picker: the kid taps icons — what to make, about what, and what vibe — and Xyplor assembles a prompt for them. (3) Read-aloud: Xyplor can read its guide's text and responses aloud. Typed input is always available for kids who can read.
Is Xyplor COPPA compliant?
Yes, from day one. COPPA is the US Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, which governs online services directed to children under 13. Xyplor's privacy practices, including parental consent for under-13 accounts, are documented at xyplor.com/privacy.
Do parents see what their 6-year-old does on Xyplor?
Yes. Every AI conversation is logged in the parent dashboard. The parent sees every prompt the child sent and every line of code the AI generated in response. Creations require parent approval before they can be published publicly, and kids need a parent-set PIN to access their profile.
What does Xyplor cost for a young kid?
The free tier lets a 6-year-old make 1 to 2 AI creations per day, with no credit card required and the full parent dashboard included. Pro is $34.99 per month for about 4 creations per day. Max is $54.99 per month for about 10 creations per day with unlimited kid profiles per family.
How does Xyplor teach AI literacy to young kids?
Kids under 9 are offered the Spark arc first — four short conversation-and-play activities that teach pattern recognition, prediction, training intuition, and skepticism (catching AI being confidently wrong) — and then they direct the AI at the thing they just learned about. It's soft and skippable, not a gate: a kid who wants to jump straight to making can. The idea is concept-before-tool, by default.
Free to start. No card to try.
A 6-year-old can make their first thing today.
Start free →Last updated: 2026-05-21