Riddles are great workouts for training your brain to think differently. Water riddles are interesting because of the changing states of water.
When water changes to ice or steam, it may behave differently than you expected. Why don’t you try to answer these fun water riddles to find out? It’s a great activity to do together as a family.
Water riddles for kids
You can find all kinds of water riddles on this page, including all of the well-known What Am I riddles, as well as harder and more tricky water riddles for adults and kids too. This is the most common sort of riddle, and kids will enjoy getting into the flow of guessing the answer.
Q. I don’t have a mouth, but I eat a lot. I am frightened of the water, but I like the wind. What am I, then?
A. Fire
Q. If you wash me, I won’t be clean; if you don’t wash me, I will be clean. What exactly am I?
A. Water
Q. I am a water child, but if you return me to the water, I’ll die. What am I, then?
A. Ice
Q. I have five eyes, yet I am blind. What exactly am I?
A. River Mississippi
Q. I’m as big as a mountain or as small as a pea, swimming in a waterless sea forever. What am I?
A. Asteroid
Q. If you give me food, I’ll live, but if you give me water, I’ll die. What exactly am I?
A. Fire
Q. I can help you in washing your shirt, and I always fall but am never injured. Look for me to beat the heat because I can run without ever using my feet.
Who am I?
A. Water
Q. What always runs and yet never walks often murmurs but never speaks!
Has a bed but never sleeps and a mouth but never eats. Who am I?
A. A stream
Q. In the summer, you will probably use me for fights; if I leak in your house, call the plumber!
Who am I?
A. Water
Q. I run endlessly yet do not move; I have no lungs or throat but a roaring call.
A. Waterfall
Q. I am solid in freezers and a liquid in rivers, and my chemical formula is H2O.
A. Water
Q. What is it that lives in the winter, dies in the summer, and grows with its root at the top?
A. Icicle
Q. When is it feasible for a man to walk on water?
A. When it turns to ice
Q. What has holes in it but can still hold water?
A. The sponge
Q. What are both water and land, but neither and always wet?
A. Wetlands
Q. What three letters indicate solid water?
A. Ice
Q. Which letter of the alphabet has the most volume for water?
A. The C (Sea)
Q. You can eat this, and it can eat you. What is it?
A. Water
Q. This is visible in the water, yet it does not get wet. What is it?
A. Reflection
Q. What is the link between the letter T and an island?
A. They are both in the middle of a body of water.
Q. When is a net useful?
A. When the water is permanently frozen.
Q. I enter the shower, but when I exit, I am totally dry. How?
A. I didn’t turn on the shower.
Q. What happens if I throw a yellow hat into the Red Sea?
A. Wet
Q. Imagine you’re in a water-filled room. There aren’t any windows or doors. How are you going to escape?
A. Stop fantasizing
Q. When does a bank run out of money?
A. When it comes to river banks
Q. What type of cup cannot hold liquid?
A. A cupcake
Q. What is it that runs but never gets tired?
A. A tap
Q. When will the water stop running downhill?
A. When it gets to the bottom
Q. What should you do if you’re swimming in the water and an alligator attacks you?
A. There are no alligators in the ocean!
Q. What goes into the water green and comes out blue?
A. A chilly frog
Hard water riddles
It can occasionally feel like a losing struggle to maintain your children’s interest throughout a long school day. How would you catch their entire attention while delivering the information they must have to be successful?
These water riddles for kids may be challenging to solve at first, but once they’ve learned them, they’ll begin to think more creatively to find solutions.
Q. Everybody who comes over there to visit alongside you becomes thirsty.
Your first buddy requests half a cup of water.
A quarter cup of water is required by your second friend.
The third of your friends request 1/8 of a cup of water, etc.
How many water cups are required to serve your friends?
A. Only one cup
Q. What differentiates a sick sailor from such a man who is blind?
A. One is not allowed to go by sea, whereas the other lacks eyesight.
Q. What takes a bath but is not soaked?
A. Baby shower
Q. A body of a man is unearthed in an empty room that only has a pool of water nearby. How did he die away?
A. An icicle was employed to kill him.
Q. What has a head as well as a mouth, yet it is unable to wear a hat?
A. River
Q. Whose bed is constantly drenched?
A. River
Q. I am filled, but I still haven’t gone down. You won’t worry if you spend a day with me. But then I am cold, and also sometimes I am not. You will not be pleased when you leap out of me! What exactly am I?
A. I am a swimming pool!
Q. I am a four-letter term that you often use. Add one more letter, and then I become a small body of water.
You may then withdraw to transform into what you can name your sibling. What type of Word Am I?
A. Book, Brook, and Brother
Q. What runs all of the time but just never moves, has no mouth and yet a tremendous roar?
A. A waterfall
Q. Two chemistry students are entering a pub. “I will have an H2O,” says the first. “I’ll have an H2O, too,” says the second. What led to the death of the second student?
A. “H2O2.” Hydrogen peroxide is a toxin that can be deadly if the concentration in water is significantly above.
Q. What drove the pine trees to the lake?
A. Trunks for swimming!
Q. This could have been found on the ground, but this is not dirty mud.
It is often put in bags to protect from flooding.
What is it?
A. Sand
Q. When there are rocks around, we must alert sailors.
So we construct this structure that shines from a great height.
What is it?
A. Lighthouse
Q. I am a building, as well as I shine from the top.
I warn sailors about hazards so that ships may sail securely.
What is it?
A. Lighthouse
Q. When the water rose in, what did the beach say?
A. Long time no sea
Q. You could sail to one or take a boat since it is covered in water, but this is not a castle with a moat. What is it?
A. The seashore
Q. You take me to the beach, so you are not required to lie in the sand. Later, when you’ve warmed in the water, I step in to help. What could I potentially be?
A. A cloth
Q. When I visit the beach. I’ve been discovered. I am smooth when I am in the water. What exactly am I?
A. Sand
Q. What occurs when a yellow rock is tossed into a purple river?
A. It makes a big splash.
Q. What do Sea Monsters actually eat?
A. Ships and Fish
Q. What did the Atlantic Ocean have to say to the Pacific?
A. Nothing. It merely waved.
Q. The level of water in a reservoir is low but increases every day. It requires 60 days to fill the reservoir.
How long does it take the reservoir to fill halfway?
A. 59 days. If the water level doubles every day, the reservoir is half the size the day before. If the reservoir is full on day 60, it was only half full on day 59, not day 30.
Q. I run but do not walk. I drip and descend, but I can’t get back up. You must absorb me, and I must sometimes surround you. What exactly am I?
A. Water
Q. What can run all day without getting too hot?
A. A cold water tap.
Q. I am everything I am and everything you see, yet I am nothing, and I escape from you. I play the horizon where I usually lie, formed of distortion and distorted senses. What exactly am I?
A. A mirage.
Q. I am built of the stuff surrounding me, yet I’m lighter. More of myself is hidden than revealed. What am I, then?
A. It is an iceberg.
Q. My steps are extremely slow, and the snow is my breath. I grind the ground to a halt. My marching drives me to be killed by the heat or drowned in the water. Who am I?
A. It is a glacier.
Q. It is white and blue in color. It’s freezing outside. It’s evident on the ice rink. It’s ideal for skating. What exactly is it?
A. Ice.
Q. What is it that cannot be burned in a fire and cannot be drowned in water?
A. Ice.
Q. As I was crossing London Bridge, I heard something break; no man in England could fix it!
What is it?
A. Ice.
Q. It grows thin in the spring and thick in the winter.
What is it?
A. Ice.
Q. Despite the fact that surrounded by water, I am not a fish. I am typically observed in the sea, but I am not a whale. I have coastlines, but I am not California, as well as the Sahara. What exactly am I?
A. The seashore
Q. It’s snowy and cold. It’s suitable for skating. What exactly is it?
A. Ice.
Funny water riddles
Kids’ brain teasers differ from other difficult or abstract puzzles because they are frequently completed for amusement. Teach your children the value of water playfully and engagingly. Below are a few interesting and humorous riddles that are guaranteed to amuse and enlighten you and your kid.
Q. What is it that everyone can split, but no one can see where it is split?
A. Water.
Q. It is so light that even a light wind can move it. It’s so tough that you can cut it with a knife, and it won’t move. What is it?
A. Water.
Q. You can hear my melody from a long distance away. It’s ringing in the pebbles. I’m sprinting down to the water. I’m gay and enjoy singing.
A. A streamlet.
Q. Two brothers look into the sea but cannot meet! What is the reason?
A. The banks of a river.
Q. What things do have a bed but never sleep in it?
A. A river.
Q. What runs all day but never walks; whispers often but never speaks; has a bed but never sleeps; and has a mouth but never eats?
A. A river.
Q. It flows yet cannot flow out. It can run but not out. What is it?
A. A river.
Q. The first pour water, the second drink it, and the third grow. What are they?
A. A raindrop, the ground, and the herb.
Q. Is it feasible for the rain to return after it has fallen?
A. It is dew time.
Q. It is looked upon by water. It makes the trees shake their heads. Flowers surrender to it. Clouds fly from it.
A. The wind.
Q. What falls in the water but does not get wet?
A. A shadow.
Q. A voyage is begun by a traveler. He travels east for the first week. The second, he goes in all directions. He flies up into the sky on the third. He returns to earth in the fourth. Who exactly is the traveler?
A. An iceberg – goes east as an iceberg, melts into free-flowing water, floats up to the sky when evaporated, and falls back down as rain.
Q. Mountains can sometimes serve as a starting point for me. I’m a body of water that can flow with great force. What am I, then?
A. A river.
Q. I have a source, but I’m not a reporter. I’m a delta, but I’m not in the Greek alphabet. Although I have banks on both sides of me, I am not surrounded by money. I flow, but I’m not a bloodstream. I have a lot of water, but I’m not a fish tank. What exactly am I?
A. A river.
Q. This, along with the sun, is what allows plants to grow. It is a four-letter word that comes before the words forest and bow. What is it?
A. Rain
Q. You will be glad you wore this jacket if a lot of stuff dropped down during a heavy downpour. What is it?
A. Raincoat
Q. I get drenched, but I am not a shower. You would place a beautiful bloom in me.
Water vapor is produced as water evaporates. Then clouds appear. I fall from the clouds when the water droplets get too heavy. What exactly am I?
A. Rain.
Q. I have three forms, but this is my solid state, and when I’m hard enough on you, you can skate.
What am I?
A. Ice
Q. This is something that you see.
When there is a storm outdoors, the rain falls from the skies in the form of tiny droplets.
What is it?
A. Rain.
Q. What, no matter how much rain falls, it never gets wetter?
A. Ocean
Q. I bear a thousand forest oaks with my strength, but a slender needle pierces me, the bearer of such burdens;
Fish swimming in the sea and birds flying in the sky once took their first life from me; I rule one-third of the planet.
What am I?
A. Water
Q. As long as you are not moving, your reflection can be seen here.
What is it?
A. Water
Q. You start with red and finish with green. What exactly am I?
A. The watermelon
Q. You can eat me, but I can also eat you. What am I?
A. Water
Q. Why is an island similar to the letter “T”?
A. Because they’re both in the middle of the water. (The middle letter of the word “water” is T.)
Q. What leads scuba divers to fall backward into the water?
A. They would still be in the boat if they fell forward.
Q. What kinds of water can you eat and chew?
A. Watermelon
Q. What is running without legs?
A. Water.
Q. What, no matter how hard it rains, it never gets any wetter?
A. Water
Q. “hijklmno” represents what liquid?
A. Water. In the alphabet, Hijklmno is “H to O.” H20 stands for water.
Q. What is it that everyone can divide, but no one can see where the split has taken place?
A. Water.
Q. What is a part of you and all around you but entangles you and kills you?
A. Water
Q. In the summer, what do you call a snowman?
A. Water
Q. What is the connection between the letter ‘T’ and an island?
A. They are both present in the middle of the water.
Q. I have lived three lives. Gentle enough to calm the skin, light enough to caress the sky, yet strong enough to break rocks.
What exactly am I?
A. I am water.
Q. This ancient one runs endlessly but never moves. He lacks lungs and a throat, but he can nevertheless make a powerful roaring call. What exactly is it?
A. A waterfall.
Q. There are two water-filled plastic jugs.
How could you put all of this water into a barrel without using any dividers or jugs and still identify which water came from which jug?
A. Freeze one or both jugs, then discard the plastic, leaving only the ice. You could now place them in the barrel and know which jug had which water.
Q. On this planet, there are four brothers who were all born together. The first never stops moving. The second eats and is never content. The third consumes and is usually thirsty. The fourth presents a never-good song. What are the four brothers’ names?
A. Water, Fire, Earth, and Wind are the four names.
I’m a former teacher with a background in child development and a passion for creating engaging and educational activities for children. I strongly understand child development and know how to create activities to help children learn and grow. Spare time, I enjoy spending time with my family, reading, and volunteering in my community.