100 Awesome Flash Fiction Prompts - Plus Bonus Prompts!

We’ve put together 100 flash fiction prompts, each one designed for a very short story. These prompts will probably be best suited to a story of between 300-1,000 words. If you want to write a longer story using these prompts, you can easily expand these ideas to fit a story of any length.

We’ll keep adding bonus prompts to this page, so come back for new prompts every month!

CONTENTS:

OUR GUIDE TO WRITING FLASH FICTION

100+ FLASH FICTION PROMPTS

Love writing stories? Register now for our free 7 Day Story Writing Challenges. Write a short story in a week, get extensive feedback on your entry, and compete for a £500 prize in each round of the challenges.

What is flash fiction?

Flash Fiction is defined as a very short story that can be anywhere from just a couple of words to about a thousand in length. The beauty (and difficulty) of writing flash fiction lies in trying to tell a complete story in so few words. Great flash fiction is succinct, emotive, thought-provoking, and impactful.

What’s the difference between flash fiction and a short story?

The only difference between flash fiction and a typical short story is the word count. However, this scarcity of words means that writing flash fiction can feel like a completely new skill. Just like the short story is a different animal to the novel or novella; flash fiction is kind of unique.

When writing flash, you’ll need to use fewer characters, a simpler plot, and you’ll have to make each word count. This is why editing is so important. You have to be brutal. Cut out everything superfluous and really make sure each and every word is performing an important function in the story. If you’re interested in writing very short fiction, why not check out drabbles? Drabbles are stories of exactly 100 words in length, and they can be a great way to practice keeping your stories very, very short.

How to plot a flash fiction story

When you sit down to write flash fiction, you must begin by choosing an appropriate plot. You cannot simply use a short story plot and tell it using fewer words. A typical flash fiction plot is like looking at one part of a story under a microscope.

For example, let’s look at prompt #21 in our list of 100 Flash Fiction Prompts: 

21. Two people on a sinking ship must decide who should take the last seat in the last lifeboat.

If you were writing a novel about a sinking ship, you’d probably want the actual sinking to be the climax of the story. Of course, there are infinite ways to write a novel about a sinking ship, but this would structurally be the most obvious. You’d use the first part of the novel to introduce your characters and describe the voyage leading up to the sinking and the sinking of the ship would be the dramatic climax, leaving the last part of the book as the resolution.

The golden rule of writing short stories is to begin as close to end as you can. So, to turn the same story from novel to short story, you’d probably want to begin with the ship sinking. You haven’t got time to introduce the characters before the action begins, so you’d need to feed in exposition and backstory here and there during the events.

All stories need a good climax. So, you would find the most dramatic moment in the story and build up to it. Perhaps your climax would be the two main characters having to decide who will take the remaining seat on the last lifeboat.

Finally, you need a resolution. In a longer short story you do have time to bring in some kind of satisfying resolution at the end.

But, if you’re writing flash fiction and your story is only a few hundred words, you really need to zoom in on one tiny moment in that story.

You don’t have time to tell the entire story of a sinking ship, but you can turn one moment into a story.

We’ve chosen the lifeboat situation as the key moment in this hypothetical story. Two characters must decide which one of them will take the last seat on the last lifeboat. This is an appropriate plot for flash fiction because it’s simple, high-stakes, dramatic, and thought provoking. 

Not all flash fiction will have a plot quite this dramatic, but all great flash fiction will have a plot that can be expressed in just one or two sentences.

If you have a plot in mind, but it seems more suitable for a longer story, you can sometimes find several flash fiction plots hidden within it. Just look for little stories within the story, like the lifeboat moment in our hypothetical tale of the sinking ship.

This brings us to our top tip for coming up with ideas for flash fiction stories:

if you’re ever stuck for ideas, you can find little stories within the story in books, movies, and TV shows. A full length feature film might have as many as 20 little incidents in it that could easily be flash fiction.

Don’t directly write a story based on the film, though. Just carefully pick out those little moments, write down what’s happening as a one or two sentence plot, and then use it to inspire your own, completely original flash fiction story.

One of our 100 Flash Fiction Prompts was actually taken from the movie Pulp Fiction!

How to write very short flash fiction

There are several reasons writers might start writing flash fiction. Of course, it could be that they just love and enjoy the form, but sometimes they’ll be a more strategic and practical reason at play.

Perhaps they want to practise the process of writing stories within the confines of a certain word limit. Maybe they are trying to develop a daily writing routine and they don’t have a lot of free time. It could be that they’re trying to break a habit of not finishing writing projects, or perhaps they are entering a flash fiction competition.

Whatever the reason, very often when we sit down to write flash, we must work under an imposed or self-imposed word restraint. We’ve set ourselves (or been set) the task of keeping the story under a particular number of words.

So, how do you plot a flash fiction story when you have to keep your story very, very short.

We’re not going to discuss stories of 100 words or fewer here. Technically, those stories are still flash, however, we prefer to categorise 100 word stories as drabbles and anything under 100 words as micro fiction.

But what if you have to keep your flash fiction story under, let’s say, 300 words? How do you write a flash fiction story that short?

The answer is: get your microscope out again. Remember earlier when we said writing flash fiction is like looking at part of a story under a microscope? If you have to write very short flash fiction, you’ll need to zoom in even further.

Let’s look at a couple of examples from our 100 Flash Fiction Prompts:

22. During a match, a young boxer must decide whether to throw the fight.

If you had 1,000 words to devote to the story, you could have time to tell the story of the entire fight. With only 300 words, it might be better to zoom in on the very moment when the boxer must choose whether or not to go down.

In a longer flash fiction story you might have time to go into detail about why he’s in this situation and why he’s so conflicted. In a 300 word story, you might only devote one or two sentences to his gambling debt and the large sum of money waiting for him if he goes down in the third round, as instructed.

46. A family must decide what to take and what to leave behind as a wildfire approaches their home.

If you had 1,000 words to devote to this story, you might be able to write about the whole process of choosing what to take and what to leave behind. You might be able to mention many different choices and have the whole family participate in the story. You’d be able to go into some details about certain choices and the stories behind individual objects or mementos, as well as the implications of choosing certain things over others.

With only 300 words, it would be advisable to zoom in on one member of the family and to focus on one profound and important choice.

How to write a flash fiction story

Now you have your mini plot, you still need to make sure your flash fiction feels like a complete story. It should still have a beginning, middle, and an end.

Just like a short story, you may need to bring in a little exposition here and there to give texture, context, backstory, and to bring some depth to the characters. But, unlike a short story, you won’t necessarily need to end with a full, detailed resolution. It’s quite common for a flash fiction story to end with a quick twist or plenty of ambiguity.

Flash Fiction is much more about eliciting emotions and provoking thought, than setting up and resolving a complex story.

Need some inspiration? Check out these 25 flash fiction stories you can read online now!


100 Awesome Flash Fiction Prompts:

  1. A young ballet dancer chooses not to tell the other dancers in her troop about a loose paving stone outside their dance studio.

  2. Two sisters realise they’ve both been on a perfect first date … with the same man.

  3. On the car journey home, two parents realise they’ve left their child’s favourite teddy on a park bench several hours away.

  4. A writer suffering from writers’ block looks for inspiration in a strange place. 

  5. Set 200 years in the future, a young man realises he’s too emotionally dependent on his robot assistant.

  6. A young woman discovers she’s taken the wrong suitcase home from the airport. The contents of the case make her question her own life choices.

  7. A murderer realises he has only 10 minutes to dispose of a body.

  8. A child decides to walk home by themselves after their parent forgets to pick them up from school … again.

  9. Your protagonist manages to talk the grim reaper out of collecting their soul.

  10. Your protagonist suddenly realises they’ve been living in a simulation.

  11. A young couple has chosen to spend the night in a haunted house to fix their marriage. Your story starts just as things get very weird.

  12. Your protagonist finds a letter they wrote to themselves when they were a teenager.

  13. Your protagonist must decide whether or not to drink from a fountain that erases all painful memories from the mind.

  14. Your protagonist comes across a street called ‘Memory Lane’. They quickly realise the name is eerily apt.

  15. A bride finds out something startling about her future husband an hour before the wedding.

  16. Your protagonist finds an advertisement for a company that promises everlasting youth.

  17. A youngest sibling shows up at a family reunion they weren’t actually invited to. 

  18. Your protagonist finds a piece of paper with a spell on it. If they say the words out loud they aren't sure if something terrible or wonderful will happen.

  19. Your protagonist is watching a jazz band play when they realise they know the drummer from somewhere — but where? It takes a whole song for them to figure it out.

  20. Your protagonist must meet their ex for lunch to tell them they’re now engaged. It’s been just a few weeks since they split up.

  21. Two people on a sinking ship must decide who should take the last seat in the last lifeboat.

  22. During a match, a young boxer must decide whether to throw the fight.

  23. Your protagonist must pack their belongings before moving to a new colony on mars.

  24. A pilot realises they have lost control of their aircraft.

  25. Your protagonist doesn’t want to attend their 100th birthday party — and for good reason!

  26.  Your protagonist gets stuck in a lift with their ex … 5 minutes after breaking up with them.

  27. A child says goodbye to the fairies in his garden before moving to a new home.

  28. Your protagonist saves someone’s life … and then wishes they hadn’t.

  29. Your protagonist arrives at a blind date. They’ve been set up with someone they actually know a little too well.

  30. Set in a dystopian future in which public displays of affection are banned, your protagonist faces an agonising choice.

  31. An agoraphobic must face their fear in order to save something important.

  32. Your protagonist must make her partner fall out of love with them. Both their lives depend on it.

  33. Your protagonist is hiking with her small children, they come face to face with a grizzly bear and her cubs. 

  34. Cinderella and Prince Charming realise they got married too quickly. 

  35. A message written in graffiti on a bathroom wall has serious implications for your protagonist. 

  36. Your protagonist finds a bag, looks inside, and realises the owner might just be their soulmate.

  37. Your protagonist has been seeing the same stranger everywhere they go for months. They finally decide to confront them.

  38. A couple realise their relationship is over during the trip of a lifetime. They’ve been saving up for the trip for years.  

  39. A public debate sees two previously married people letting their private grievances come into their arguments.

  40. Your protagonist plans their escape from a retirement home.

  41. A couple realise their fundamental beliefs are at odds with each other.

  42. An artist develops an obsession with drawing a next-door neighbour.

  43. Your protagonist finds themselves trapped in a cabin with a group of hikers during a heavy snowfall.

  44. An ice skater must face going back on the ice after a dangerous fall.

  45. A couple must decide their plan for New Year’ Eve. They both have secret reasons for their choice. 

  46. A family must decide what to take and what to leave behind as a wildfire approaches their home.

  47. Your protagonist is waiting for someone important at the airport. They begin to think that person isn’t going to show up … and then they realise why.  

  48. Your protagonist must find their way through a maze. What they find in the middle of the maze is the last thing they were expecting.

  49. An actor waiting in the wings has forgotten his first line.   

  50. Your protagonist is wrongly identified as a hero. Do they come clean?

  51. Your protagonist realises their past is catching up with them.

  52. Your protagonist overhears something that has serious implications for them while trying on clothes in a changing room.

  53. Your protagonist is in a costume shop trying to decide what to dress up as for Halloween.

  54. Your protagonist realises they’ve slipped into an alternate dimension.

  55. A surgeon must make an impossible choice on the operating table.

  56. A pregnant journalist interviews the mother of a missing child.

  57. Your protagonist must ask his girlfriend’s father for his blessing, only to discover the father knows his deepest secret.

  58. Your protagonist sees something on social media that will change their life forever.

  59. Two work colleagues realise they’ve been dreaming the same dreams for weeks.

  60. A reluctant daughter comes to terms with having to carry on the family business.

  61. Your protagonist realises she must go on the run.

  62. Two bank robbers disagree on their plan to rob a bank. This leads to a disastrous consequence. 

  63. A strange case of deja vous leaves your protagonist convinced of supernatural interference. 

  64. A sceptic begins to question their beliefs during a psychic reading.

  65. Your protagonist uncovers a scandal at their workplace. 

  66. A hapless cook tries to recreate her late father’s favourite recipes in an effort to feel connected to him.

  67. Your protagonist has a premonition that makes them certain they can’t visit their mother-in-law for Christmas. Now he must convince his husband.

  68. A young backpacker discovers something unexpected in a cave.

  69. An impulsive character and an indecisive character are brought together by chance. They must make an important choice.

  70. Two characters cleaning up after a party discover an object that sheds light on something strange that happened earlier.

  71. Two strangers are trapped together during a blackout. 

  72. Your protagonist must take a leap of faith in order to save something important to them.

  73. Your protagonist discovers a huge part of their life has been a lie.

  74. Your protagonist has set up an elaborate way to propose. Inexplicably, everything goes wrong. 

  75. Your protagonist must buy a dress for her mother’s funeral. 

  76. Your protagonist goes back to her favourite city in the world, only to find it has completely changed.  

  77. While stargazing, your protagonist realises the stars are forming secret messages in the sky.

  78. Your protagonist hears a news story on the radio that will mean the world changes forever. However, she seems to be the only person who heard it.

  79. Your protagonist is crossing a frozen lake. They see something under the ice that definitely shouldn’t be there.

  80. A workaholic must come to terms with retirement.

  81. An Olympic athlete must decide whether or not to report their teammate for doping. 

  82. A young mother feels isolated from her childless friends.

  83. Your protagonist is about to realise their greatest ambition. Will it be everything they were hoping for?

  84. Onboard a spaceship, a couple prepare to go into stasis for hundreds of years. 

  85. Your protagonist has an obsession with thinking about the past.

  86. Set in a post-apocalyptic future, your protagonist meets an unlikely love interest. 

  87. Your protagonist visits a place from their childhood and realises their memories of that time might not be accurate at all.

  88. A small child has decided to run away from home. Her parents watch on with amusement as she decides what to put in her backpack.

  89. On a whim, a bus driver decides to radically change his route, much to the chagrin of his passengers. 

  90. Dystopian. A couple in love are only allowed to spend time with each other one day a year.

  91. A shapeshifter begins to realise their powers are fading. They must decide what form will be the last one they take before they cannot change again.

  92. The devil visits your protagonist with an offer on her soul.

  93. Your protagonist suddenly has the ability to read minds. There’s only one place they want to go now!

  94. Your very wealthy protagonist has designed a simple test to see who will inherit her estate.

  95. An archaeologist discovers something that will change how we see the history of the world. It could be dangerous. Does he keep it to himself?

  96. Your protagonist must clear out their late mother’s house. She discovers an incredible family secret.

  97. Your protagonist is meeting his brother. They haven’t seen each other for 20 years.

  98. Your protagonist develops the ability to see the world literally through someone else’s eyes.

  99. Your protagonist starts to believe their partner might be a spy.

  100. Your protagonist discovers a hidden camera in their living room.


Looking for a flash fiction competition? Check out our ‘Big List of International Writing Competitions!’

Looking for inspiration? Why not check out our list of the 20 Greatest Short Story Writers of All Time!

Just received another short story rejection? Here’s our post about ‘How to Deal With Story Rejections’

Bonus Prompts!

  1. Two characters waiting by the side of the road realise they are both meeting the same person.

  2. A woman loses her young niece in a busy shopping mall.

  3. Three strangers must solve a riddle in order to gain entry to a secret club.

  4. A poor woman must borrow ingredients from her neighbours to bake her husband a birthday cake.

  5. A waiter finally finds out why an old man has been coming to the restaurant where he works every day at exactly the same time.

  6. Two work colleagues must decide which of them is to take the blame for a terrible mistake at work.

  7. Your disgruntled protagonist goes to confront the couple next door about the strange noises they’ve been hearing at night.

  8. A family dinner party sees three characters make three very surprising announcements.

  9. Two women argue over who should get to buy the last dress available in a store. How do they decide who should get it?

  10. A young couple find out they knew (and disliked) each other vehemently as children.

Love writing stories? Register now for our free 7 Day Story Writing Challenges. Write a short story in a week, get extensive feedback on your entry, and compete for a prize of £500 in each round of the challenge. Register today!

Mastered the art of flash fiction? Now you can try submitting your stories to literary magazines! We’ve compiled a list of the best literary magazines that don’t charge a reading fee! Check out our Big List of No-Fee Literary Magazines.

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