Halloween Costume Guide
Seven items, one prop that does all the explaining. The most responsible big sister in nursery rhyme history, and the costume your toddler will absolutely recognize before you finish putting it on.
YoYo spends most of her screen time helping JJ, organizing the family, and being effortlessly competent in that specific way only fictional six-year-olds can manage. She is the middle child of the CoComelon family, older than JJ and younger than TomTom, and she is the one who actually has things together. The pigtails are the whole costume. Every parent of a toddler will recognize her immediately. Everyone else at the party will smile politely and have no idea what is happening, which is fine, because this costume is not for them.
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The pigtails are what people read first, and they have to be high enough to be pigtails and not just two low sections of hair. A pigtail that has slipped to ear level by 7pm is not a YoYo, it is just a kid with hair ties. Set them high, pin them, and check them at the halfway point of the night. The yoyo in hand is what closes the recognition loop for anyone who is not immediately sure. Without both details working at the same time, the costume reads as a cute dress rather than a specific character.
YoYo’s whole personality is “I have this handled.” She helps, she organizes, she encourages JJ, and she does all of it with the confidence of someone who has simply decided she is in charge. At a Halloween event, this means the character voice is easy: ask if everyone has enough candy, check that JJ has not dropped anything, and deliver the correction in a calm, cheerful tone that makes it clear this is not the first time you have had to say this. It is very effective and requires almost no performance skill whatsoever.
Pigtail Height Matters More Than You Think
Set them at the crown, not at the ears. Ear-level pigtails look like regular hair. Crown-level pigtails look like YoYo. Use bobby pins under each tie to anchor them. Without the pins, the weight of the hair over an evening of trick-or-treating will pull them down, and halfway through the night you will have an unnamed child in a polka dot dress.
The YoYo Is Also a Toy, Which Is Both Great and a Problem
Kids will want to actually use the yoyo all night, which is fine until there is a crowd. On open sidewalks: great prop, keeps hands busy, adds to the character. In a tight group or a doorstep handoff: put it in a pocket. A yoyo on a string in a crowd of excited children is a tangle waiting to happen.
The CoComelon Crew — Nursery Royalty
This is the strongest option for families with multiple kids, or a preschool class looking for a theme. Every character has a distinct enough look that no two costumes are identical, and any parent watching trick-or-treaters come down the street is going to lose their mind in the best way. The more characters you can fill, the better the group reads. Two CoComelon kids is a coincidence. Five is an event.
Cartoon Toddler Icons — Playdate Legends
A solid group concept because every character here has its own distinct color palette and silhouette. No two costumes look alike, and any child or parent in the vicinity will recognize at least three of the five. Conditional on age — Rosie from Rosie’s Rules is newer and recognition will vary by household, but the other four are safe bets at any family Halloween event.
The Other YoYos
This is a niche group concept and it knows it. The humor is entirely in the commitment. YoYo Rodriguez from Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is a genuinely good costume on its own. A person dressed as YoYo Ma with a cello is a specific kind of funny. The literal yoyo toy costume works if someone is willing to be the string. Only attempt this if your group has a high tolerance for explaining the joke, because you will be explaining it all night.
Preschool Pastel Power — Same-Vibe Animated Crews
A looser concept built around a shared aesthetic rather than a shared franchise. The pastel and bright palette ties the group together visually even if the characters have nothing to do with each other. Abby Cadabby is the strongest recognition anchor here. Dot and Masha will land for families who watch those shows specifically and probably not for anyone else. I’d call this conditional on how much your group cares about strangers understanding the theme.
This costume runs cheap if your kid already has any pink clothing and a polka dot anything. The yoyo and the purple hair ties are the two items worth ordering specifically no matter what, because those two things are what makes the character readable.
YoYo is helpful, cheerful, and quietly very sure of herself. She does not demand attention. She just handles things. That is a surprisingly easy character to play because it requires almost no effort and the bar for recognition from other CoComelon families is just the costume itself.
Seven items: pink shirt, polka dot dress, bike shorts underneath, fake collar, purple hair ties in high pigtails, red yoyo prop, and green flat shoes. The pigtails and the yoyo are the two essential pieces. Without both, the costume is just a nice dress.
Three lines YoYo is known for:
The first one is the line every CoComelon parent knows. Deliver it with genuine enthusiasm and watch the reaction from anyone in earshot who has a toddler at home.
CoComelon is still one of the most-watched children’s shows globally, and any parent of a toddler or preschooler will place YoYo without hesitation. Adults without young kids at home probably will not recognize her. This costume works best at family trick-or-treating, school events, and anywhere the audience includes people who have heard the theme song more times than they can count.
YoYo is the middle child of the CoComelon family, older sister to JJ and younger sister to TomTom. She is around six or seven years old, loves art and creative activities, and has a strong instinct to help and encourage the people around her. She was voiced by Hannah An from 2018 to 2022, and by Lily Bell Morgan since 2023.
Yes, for recognition. Without it, the costume reads as a generic pink dress to anyone who does not already know the character. With it, CoComelon families will clock the character from across a parking lot. It also keeps kids entertained between doors, which is worth the $5 on its own.
Probably halfway. A pink shirt and polka dot dress are common in most toddler wardrobes. Bike shorts almost certainly exist. The items worth ordering are the red yoyo, the purple hair ties, and the fake collar. Those three together cost very little and cover the details that make the costume readable.