These DIY Montessori touch boards (also known as Montessori touch tablets) are introduced at 2-3 years old and are one of the first items you will present to your child in your Montessori homeschool. Sensory activities for preschoolers help develop sensory awareness for touch, sight, taste, hearing, smelling, balance, and movement.
Using Montessori touch boards helps develop a child’s sense of touch and teaches them the concept of textures. In traditional Montessori classrooms, these are small wooden boards with sandpaper secured to the top of them. They can cost up to $50+ to buy online, but this DIY gives you an inexpensive alternative. A staple Montessori sensorial activity that can be saved and used repeatedly for every child in your family.
Below, I’ll show you how I made them using cardstock, sandpaper, heavy-duty glue, and a laminator. They are durable enough for years of use and your child will never know the difference between these DIY boards and the ones commonly used in a Montessori classroom.
Table of Contents

How to make a touch board in Montessori?
Step 1: Gather Materials
- Heavy Duty White Cardstock
- Laminator (Amazon Fellowes Laminator Saturn 3i)
- 5mm Lamination sheets (Amazon Fellowes Lamination Sheets 5mm)
- Sandpaper in grit sizes Extra Course, Course, Fine, and Extra Fine (Amazon Sandpaper Assortment Pack)
- Heavy Duty Adhesive (Amazon Power Tac Glue)
- Ruler and Pen for marking
- Scissors
*As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Several of these items are on my 8 Must-Have Tools and Materials for Montessori HomeSchool Moms blog post.
Step 2: Cut Your Sandpaper Strips to These Sizes
Don’t worry too much about the color of your sandpapers matching. This activity is about using sensory skills to feel textures, not about colors or shades of colors! If you can only find different grits in different colors, that will work just fine.
You’ll be making 3 different Montessori touch boards, so you’ll need to cut specific grits of sandpaper to specific sizes. I have broken them down by board for you:
Board #1: Extra course sandpaper – Cut in a rectangle to 8.5″ x 5.5″
Board #2: Extra course sandpaper – Cut 5 strips to 8.5″ x 1″
Board #3: Extra course, course, fine, extra fine – Cut one strip of each grit to 8.5″ x 2 1/4″
Step 3: Laminate the Cardstock
Put a blank page of white cardstock in your lamination sheet and run it through the laminator. Do this 3 times, for a total of 3 blank laminated white pages. The smooth lamination will act as our “smooth” part of the board.
Step 4: Glue The Sandpaper to the Laminated Cardstock
Take the sandpaper you’ve cut from step 2 and glue them using heavy-duty glue to the laminated white cardstock. You will have 3 Montessori touch boards:
Board #1: Glue the large extra course rectangle to one side of one of the cardstock pages, leaving the other half smooth.

Board #2: Glue the strips of extra course sandpaper every 1 1/8″, leaving an end that is smooth and approximately 1 3/8″ wide.

Board #3: Glue the strips of sandpaper from coarsest to smoothest alongside each other, making a gradient of textures and leaving about 2″ of white laminated cardstock at the end.

Step 5: Let Glue Dry Completely
I recommend letting the heavy-duty glue dry for at least 24 hours before using the boards with your child to ensure they are securely set to the lamination plastic.

Step 6: Present The Montessori Touch Boards to Your Child
Now that you’ve made your new sensory touch boards, you’re ready to present them to your child. Here are two good resources I found for learning how to use them.
Rough & Smooth Boards Instructions @ Montessori Album
Rough & Smooth Boards @ Carrots Are Orange
Have you completed this DIY for your child? Did they enjoy learning about textures and developing their sensory skills? How else do you incorporate sensorial learning into your activities at home?

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