Is it OK to go trick-or-treating during the pandemic?

It depends on the situation and your comfort level, but there are ways to minimize the risk of infection this Halloween.


What You Need To Know

  • For parents weighing whether or not it’s safe to go trick-or-treating this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, experts say families should weigh a variety of factors, including individual comfort levels, as well as local transmission rates and the percentage of adults that have been vaccinated against COVID-19

  • Trick-or-treating is an outdoor activity, and many infectious disease experts note that it can be easy to participate while still maintaining safe physical distance from others

  • To prevent kids crowding in front of doors, some suggest that neighbors work together to coordinate a spread-out method of trick-or-treating

  • Others suggest having hand sanitizer for kids, and wearing masks while passing out candy

Whether you feel comfortable with your children trick-or-treating could depend on factors including how high the COVID-19 transmission rate is in your area and if the people your kids will be exposed to are vaccinated.

But trick-or-treating is an outdoor activity that makes it easy to maintain a physical distance, notes Emily Sickbert-Bennett, an infectious disease expert at the University of North Carolina. To prevent kids crowding in front of doors, she suggests neighbors coordinating to spread out trick-or-treating.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says outdoor activities are safer for the holidays, and to avoid crowded, poorly ventilated spaces. If you attend a party inside, the agency says people who aren’t vaccinated — including children who aren’t yet eligible for the shots — should wear a well-fitting mask, not just a Halloween costume mask. In areas with high COVID-19 transmission rates, even the fully vaccinated should wear masks inside.

It’s generally safe for children to ring doorbells and collect candy, since the coronavirus spreads mainly through respiratory droplets and the risk of infection from surfaces is considered low. But it’s still a good idea to bring along hand sanitizer that kids can use before eating treats.

For adults, having a mask on hand when you open the door to pass out candy is important.

“You probably won’t necessarily know until you open the door how many people will be out there, whether they’ll be wearing masks, what age they’ll be, and how great they’ll be at keeping distance from you,” Sickbert-Bennett says.

Another option if families want want to be extra cautious: Set up candy bowls away from front doors.