50 Short Story Ideas to Spark Your Next Masterpiece
Stuck for inspiration? Here are 50 original story ideas and writing prompts across every genre to kickstart your next piece of short fiction.
Why Use Writing Prompts?
Every writer hits a wall. The blank page stares back, and nothing comes. Writing prompts and story ideas aren't crutches โ they're launchpads. Many celebrated short stories began as simple "what if" questions.
The ideas below are deliberately open-ended. They give you a starting point but leave room for your voice, your characters, and your twists. Pick one that sparks something, and start writing.
Literary Fiction Ideas
1. A retired teacher receives a letter from a student she failed 30 years ago.
2. Two strangers share a park bench every morning for a year without speaking โ until one day, one doesn't show up.
3. A woman discovers her late mother's journal and realises the life story she was told was entirely fabricated.
4. The last independent bookshop in a city is about to close. Write the final day.
5. A father and daughter drive across the country in silence after a family funeral.
6. A translator working on a novel begins to suspect the author is writing about them.
7. Someone finds their childhood home on a property listing and decides to view it.
8. A couple celebrates their 50th anniversary. Neither mentions the secret they've both kept.
Horror & Dark Fiction Ideas
9. A night-shift security guard notices that the paintings in the gallery have changed position.
10. A family moves into a house where every previous tenant left after exactly three months.
11. A podcast host investigating urban legends starts receiving messages from one of the legends.
12. You wake up and everyone you meet insists they've already had a conversation with you today.
13. A child's imaginary friend starts leaving physical evidence of its existence.
14. A support group for insomniacs discovers they're all dreaming the same thing.
15. The last voicemail on a dead person's phone is from them โ left an hour after they died.
16. A lighthouse keeper on a remote island receives supplies from a boat that, according to records, sank decades ago.
Romance & Relationship Ideas
17. Two people matched on a dating app realise they've met before, in a context neither wants to discuss.
18. A chef creates a meal for a food critic who turns out to be their ex.
19. Love letters are found hidden inside the walls during a house renovation.
20. Two rival authors are booked into the same tiny writing retreat for a week.
21. A wedding photographer falls for one of the guests โ at the wedding they're shooting.
22. A couple relives their first date exactly as it happened, 20 years later.
23. Pen pals who've written to each other for years finally agree to meet.
24. A florist keeps receiving anonymous orders โ all for the same grave.
Science Fiction Ideas
25. In the future, memories can be sold. A woman discovers her happiest memory has already been purchased by someone else.
26. The first AI to pass the Turing test refuses to speak to anyone except one specific person.
27. Earth receives a message from deep space. The message is a children's lullaby.
28. A time traveller keeps returning to the same unremarkable Tuesday. They can't figure out why.
29. A colony ship arrives at its destination after 200 years โ but someone has already been there.
30. A surgeon who can transplant consciousness gets a request from an unusual patient.
31. Virtual reality has replaced dreaming. One person still dreams naturally, and governments want to know why.
32. The last library on Earth holds one book that no scanner can digitise.
Mystery & Thriller Ideas
33. A detective retires and moves to a quiet village โ then recognises a face from an unsolved case.
34. A true-crime writer receives a manuscript that describes a murder identical to one that hasn't been reported yet.
35. Someone checks into a hotel under a false name. The receptionist hands them a package that's been waiting for them โ addressed to the fake name.
36. A teacher discovers that five of their students have the same unusual scar in the same place.
37. A locked-room mystery set in an escape room.
38. An inheritance is split between four siblings, each given a sealed envelope. One envelope is empty.
39. A journalist investigating a missing person case starts finding evidence that the person never existed.
40. An amateur genealogist traces their family tree and discovers they share an ancestor with their next-door neighbour.
Fantasy & Speculative Ideas
41. A mapmaker draws a country that doesn't exist โ then receives a letter from someone who lives there.
42. Every person is born with a word written on their skin. Yours is in a language no one can identify.
43. A bookshop sells stories that haven't been written yet. Buying one means living it.
44. The last dragon in the world is the size of a cat and lives in a pensioner's garden shed.
45. A curse turns spoken lies into visible marks on the speaker's skin.
46. A musician plays a chord that opens a door to another world โ but only while the note sustains.
47. The seasons have stopped changing. An archivist finds the only record of when it last happened: 10,000 years ago.
48. A wish-granting well runs dry. The person who made the last wish wants it back.
Experimental & Unusual Ideas
49. Write a story told entirely through text messages between two people who are lost in the same building.
50. A story told backwards โ starting from the resolution and ending at the inciting incident.
How to Use These Ideas
Don't feel bound by the prompt exactly as written. Use it as a springboard:
- Change the setting, gender, time period, or genre
- Combine two prompts into one story
- Start with the emotion the prompt evokes rather than the literal scenario
- Ask "what's the worst thing that could happen?" and write that
The goal isn't to follow the idea perfectly โ it's to start writing. Once you're a few paragraphs in, the story will take on a life of its own.
When you've written something you're proud of, consider publishing it on StorySloth. Every story is reviewed by a human, and publishing is completely free.
Frequently Asked Questions
Start with observations from real life, "what if" questions, overheard conversations, or strong emotions. The best ideas often come from combining two unrelated concepts. Writing prompts are also a great starting point.
Absolutely. These prompts are free to use for any purpose. The prompt is just a starting point โ the story you write from it is entirely yours.
Write in the genre you enjoy reading most. If you're unsure, try literary fiction โ it's the most flexible genre and lets you focus on character and prose rather than genre conventions.
The only way to know is to write it. Many writers are surprised โ ideas that feel weak can produce brilliant stories, and ideas that feel amazing can fall flat. The execution matters more than the premise.
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