The tempting move — run the adult rules at kid scale — fails in practice. Three-week secrecy is too long for a six-year-old. Twenty-euro budgets push kids out of their earning range. A kid-adapted version keeps the magic without the stress.
Four moves for a mixed-age draw
Run the kids' draw separately from the adults'
Kids draw kids, adults draw adults. The budgets, rules and timelines are different enough that merging them creates friction for everyone. Two parallel draws run by the same organizer feels like one event and scales the constraints correctly.
Scale the budget to pocket-money reality
Five to ten euros for children, twenty-five for adults. Do not pretend it is the same budget — kids know it is not, and the fiction creates awkwardness. A clearly scaled figure lets everyone participate with real agency.
Shorten the secrecy window for kids
Draw the names three to five days before the reveal, not three weeks. Short windows are easier on small kids and prevent the gift from slipping out in an excited moment. Adults can handle the longer wait alongside.
Let parents scaffold, not substitute
A parent helps the child shop, wrap and arrive on time. They do not pick the gift or raise the budget unilaterally. The best family draws respect that the child's creative choice is the gift — even when the object is small.
The mistake to avoid
Do not turn the reveal into an assessment. A child's gift — a drawing, a hand-made card, a careful pick at the one-euro shop — is the outcome of real thought, even if the object is modest. Parents who redirect toward the adult exchange at reveal time miss the point.
Run the family draw in one app
Cuchumbo handles any family exchange — kids draw kids, adults draw adults, same tool, two invitations. Parents can accept the invite on behalf of young children. Free, no account, no app to install.