300+ Halloween Gifts on Amazon for 2026
I love when Halloween decor starts creeping into regular home design. We've pulled together over 300 finds from Amazon, from those massive 12-foot skeletons everyone fights over to smaller things like goth jewelry and bath bombs. Whether you're turning your lawn into a graveyard or just want a quiet night with a horror movie, here are 15 categories to look through.
Your front yard is the first thing trick-or-treaters see, and these picks go all in. We're talking 12-foot skeletons with LCD eyes, motion-activated zombie groundbreakers, and inflatable UFOs that tower over your roof. There are fog machines for that creepy low-lying mist effect, solar eyeball lights that sway in the wind, and giant spider webs that cover 1,400 square feet of lawn. Most items ship with stakes or hanging hardware included, so setup takes an afternoon at most. If you start decorating the day after Labor Day, start here. These are the pieces that make people pull over to take photos.
Turning your living room into a haunted house used to mean draping fake cobwebs over a lamp. Now there are projection kits that put ghosts in your windows, smart bulbs you can set to flicker blood-red, and floating candles you control with a wand. This section covers the tech side of Halloween: projectors, LED masks, blacklight bars, plasma balls, and speakers for your custom horror playlist. The AtmosFX kit works on any flat surface, and the Govee curtain lights display preset Halloween patterns. Good options here whether you're hosting a party or just want your apartment to feel properly spooky for movie night.
Halloween parties need more than a bowl of candy corn on the counter. These kitchen and hosting picks cover everything from coffin-shaped charcuterie boards to skull ice molds and blood bag drink pouches. The Staub pumpkin cocotte works year-round for soups and stews, and the skeleton hand salad servers are genuinely functional. There are also table runners, gothic chalice goblets, and a poison apple mug that looks better than it has any right to. If you're hosting a dinner party or just want your kitchen to match the season, this section has the most everyday-usable items on the list.
Not everyone wants to spend Halloween night covered in fake blood. This section is for the people who'd rather soak in a coffin-shaped bath bomb while watching a horror movie on the laptop. There are pumpkin enzyme face masks that actually exfoliate, charcoal detox soaps, blood bag shower gels, and a cauldron-shaped wax warmer that smells like autumn without being another basic pumpkin spice candle. The bat wing headband keeps hair out of your face during skincare routines, and the skeleton hand ring holder looks good on a bathroom shelf year-round. Solid gift picks for anyone who treats spooky season as an excuse to upgrade their self-care routine.
This isn't just costumes. There's a whole loungewear section here for people who want to be festive without committing to a full outfit. The skeleton fleece onesie is genuinely comfortable for couch horror marathons, and the spooky season crewneck works all through October. For actual costumes, the list pulls from recent trends: Beetlejuice, Wednesday Addams, M3GAN, and a surprisingly good inflatable T-Rex. There are also matching family pajamas if that's your thing, plus glow-in-the-dark spider leggings and bat wing hoodies for a low-effort Halloween look that still reads as intentional.
Kids burn through Halloween excitement faster than candy, so this section covers both costumes and things to keep them busy. The Squishmallows Halloween squad comes back every year with new characters, and the Lego Hocus Pocus cottage is a solid build for older kids. For costumes, there's a glow-in-the-dark skeleton jumpsuit, Paw Patrol outfits for toddlers, and a Harry Potter deluxe robe. We also included adaptive wheelchair covers, because Halloween should work for every kid. Non-toxic face paint crayons, light-up fairy wings, and glow tattoos round out the section for parents who want easy, safe options.
Your dog is going to hate you for about ten minutes and then forget the costume exists. That's the deal. This section has the classics: lion mane wigs, spider leg harnesses, and the UPS driver costume that never stops being funny. For cats, there are bat wing harnesses and catnip-filled felt bats they'll actually play with. The walking teddy bear costume is one of the most photographed options on social media right now. We also included practical items like glow-in-the-dark safety collars for nighttime trick-or-treating walks and pumpkin spice dog treats from Greenies. A haunted house cat scratcher rounds things out for the feline crowd.
Halloween candy buying splits into two groups: stuff for the trick-or-treaters and stuff you hide in the back of the pantry for yourself. This section covers both. There's a 5-pound bulk candy mix for handing out, Reese's pumpkins in bulk, and Kinder Joy Halloween eggs kids go wild for. On the fancier side, Godiva truffle flights and chocolate-covered strawberries make good host gifts. The weirder picks include a 3-pound gummy worm, Zombie Skittles with mystery disgusting flavors, and skull-shaped sugar cubes for your morning coffee. Ghost pepper hot sauce sets and edible fake blood syrup are here for the adventurous cooks.
Some people would rather make their decorations than buy them, and this section is built for that. The Woobles crochet ghost kit works for complete beginners since the yarn comes pre-started and the instructions are unusually clear. For carving enthusiasts, the stainless steel pumpkin tool set is a real upgrade from those flimsy kits at the grocery store. There are also needle felting kits, diamond painting sets, macrame ghost wall hangings, and a book nook shelf insert that looks like a miniature alley. The tie-dye kit comes in orange and black, and the ceramic pumpkin painting kit ships ready to go with brushes and paints included.
Year-round goth meets seasonal Halloween in this stationery section. The skull pen holder and raven desk lamp work on any desk without screaming costume store. A gothic 2026 planner with moon phases keeps your schedule organized while staying on theme. The coffin-shaped letter board and cork board are conversation starters in any office. For the writers, there's a leather grimoire journal, metallic gel pens, and a wax seal stamp kit with a skull design. Bat wing monitor toppers clip onto any screen, and the ouija board mouse pad is oversized enough to actually be functional. Most of these items look good well past November.
Horror readers and tarot collectors could fill an entire shelf from this section alone. The book picks lean toward modern horror: Joe Hill's King Sorrow, Silvia Moreno-Garcia's The Bewitching, and Carissa Orlando's The September House all landed here. Junji Ito's Uzumaki hardcover is the manga pick for people who like their horror visual and deeply unsettling. On the tarot side, there are six different decks ranging from the Nightmare Before Christmas set to the classic Rider-Waite-Smith centennial edition. A Kindle Paperwhite and Audible gift membership made the list too, for people who prefer reading in the dark.
This is the section for people who keep their Halloween decorations on display in January. NECA figures dominate here with Art the Clown, Sam from Trick 'r Treat, and a Gargoyles Goliath that's hard to find in stores. Funko collectors get horror-themed Pop figures, Bitty Pops, and SODA figures with chase variants. For prop collectors, there's a replica Jason mask, a Freddy Krueger metal glove, and a Necronomicon from Evil Dead that doubles as a conversation piece. The Department 56 Halloween Village pieces are for the same people who do Christmas villages but with a better aesthetic. Loungefly's horror mini backpacks round things out.
Board games and party supplies get lumped together here because they solve the same problem: keeping a room full of people entertained. Betrayal at House on the Hill is the go-to Halloween board game for a reason, since the house literally turns on you mid-game. One Night Ultimate Werewolf plays fast and works with big groups. Hunt A Killer's mystery box gives you an actual case to solve over dinner. On the party supply side, there's everything from fog machine fluid and glow sticks in bulk to bloody tablecloths and bat-shaped cupcake toppers. The inflatable spider ring toss is surprisingly fun after a couple drinks.
Halloween jewelry falls into two camps: the stuff you wear once for a costume and the stuff that quietly lives in your rotation all year. This section leans toward the second category. A sterling silver spider ring, obsidian crystal necklace, and snake coil ring all work outside of October. The coffin crossbody bag and wool witch hat are statement pieces that pair well with a regular outfit. For the more seasonal picks, there are glow-in-the-dark ghost earrings, bat hair clips, and a blood vial necklace that always gets questions. Spider web tights and skeleton mechanics gloves are here too for the full-commitment crowd.
Whether you're going for a quick cat-eye-and-whiskers look or a full prosthetic zombie transformation, the products here cover the range. Mehron's Paradise AQ palette is what theater kids and cosplayers actually use since the pigment shows up and lasts through a sweaty party. Liquid latex and scar wax let you build wounds and texture from scratch. For easier wins, there are face gems, eyeliner stamps in bat shapes, and press-on stiletto nails in black. UV glow body paint is the move for blacklight parties. We also included the boring-but-essential stuff: spirit gum, setting spray that won't quit, and a makeup remover balm for the end of the night.
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