Baby sleep changes fast in the first year—wake windows stretch, naps consolidate, and nighttime sleep gradually lengthens. A simple, age-based rhythm can reduce guesswork while staying flexible for growth spurts, feeding needs, and developmental leaps. This guide lays out practical expectations by month range, gentle routine building blocks, and sample schedules that can be adjusted to fit a baby’s temperament and a family’s day.
Sleep in the first year is less about forcing fixed times and more about understanding what’s realistic for a given age and then building consistency where it helps most.
| Age | Typical naps/day | Approx. wake window range | Routine focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–8 weeks | 4–6 | 45–75 min | Feed–sleep flow, daylight exposure, safe sleep setup |
| 2–3 months | 4–5 | 60–90 min | Simple pre-nap cues, consistent morning start time |
| 3–4 months | 3–5 | 75–120 min | Bedtime routine, soothing ladder, early bedtime option |
| 5–6 months | 3 | 2–3 hrs | Nap spacing, stable bedtime, reduce overtiredness |
| 7–9 months | 2–3 | 2.5–3.5 hrs | Two-nap structure, manage separation anxiety/wakings |
| 10–12 months | 2 | 3–4 hrs | Consistent schedule anchors, travel/teething flexibility |
As you refine sleep habits, keep safe sleep fundamentals front and center. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) safe sleep recommendations and the CDC infant safe sleep guidance are strong references for creating a safer sleep environment.
Babies usually respond best to small, repeatable signals rather than big, sudden changes. These building blocks help a “good-enough” rhythm stick, even when naps are unpredictable.
These are starting templates, not rigid rules. Shift by 10–15 minutes as needed, and remember that feeding needs and nap length will move the whole day.
Wake → feed → brief play (or cuddles) → nap; repeat every 2–3 hours. Bedtime is simply the longest sleep opportunity in a dark room, with calm, low-stimulation care overnight.
Start with a consistent morning “day start,” then cycle through naps after about 60–90 minutes awake. Begin a simple bedtime routine after the last feed window; if evenings are consistently fussy, trial an earlier bedtime for a few nights.
If you want a single place to reference age-by-age expectations, routine building blocks, and troubleshooting steps, Restful Beginnings: Baby Sleep by Age eBook lays out gentle structure from newborn through 12 months without rigid rules. It’s designed to help you adjust systematically—so when sleep shifts, you’re not starting from scratch.
For families who do best with a simple, repeatable evening flow, Sleepytime Success: Bedtime Routine Checklist for Kids adds an easy-to-follow routine framework you can post in the nursery or share with caregivers.
Newborns usually do best with a flexible feed–sleep rhythm rather than fixed times. Many families notice more predictability around 3–4 months, while simple routines (sleep cues and a consistent morning start) can begin earlier.
A practical range is 45–75 minutes for newborns, 60–90 minutes for 2–3 months, about 2–3 hours for 4–6 months, 2.5–3.5 hours for 7–9 months, and 3–4 hours for 10–12 months. Temperament and nap quality matter—after a short nap, the next wake window often needs to be shorter.
Keep the room dark and boring, then work through a soothing ladder: pause briefly, shush/pat, pick up to calm, and put back down. Also check that daytime sleep and wake windows are balanced, and offer feeds based on age and medical guidance rather than habit or stimulation.
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