Baby Sleep Guide UK How Much Sleep, Wake Windows, Training & What’s Normal
The complete guide to baby sleep for UK parents — covering how much sleep babies need at every age, wake windows, building a sleep-friendly environment, sleep training approaches, sleep regressions and the things that genuinely help versus the things that don’t.
① How Much Sleep Does My Baby Need?
Sleep needs vary significantly between individual babies — the ranges below are normal population averages, not targets. A baby consistently sleeping at the low or high end of these ranges and thriving in all other respects is almost certainly fine. These figures include both night sleep and all naps combined.
| Age | Total sleep per 24 hours | Night sleep | Naps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Newborn (0–3 months) | 14–17 hours | 8–9 hours (fragmented) | 4–5 naps, irregular |
| 4–6 months | 12–16 hours | 9–11 hours | 3–4 naps |
| 6–9 months | 12–15 hours | 10–11 hours | 2–3 naps |
| 9–12 months | 12–14 hours | 10–12 hours | 2 naps |
| 12–18 months | 11–14 hours | 10–12 hours | 1–2 naps |
| 18 months–3 years | 11–14 hours | 10–12 hours | 1 nap (may drop) |
② Newborn Sleep — What Is Normal
Newborn sleep is genuinely chaotic by adult standards, and understanding why helps manage expectations. Newborns have not yet developed a circadian rhythm — the internal biological clock that aligns sleep with darkness and wakefulness with light. This develops gradually over the first 3–4 months. Until it does, sleep happens in short cycles throughout the 24-hour period with no reliable distinction between day and night.
Newborn sleep cycles are approximately 45–50 minutes long, compared to adult cycles of 90 minutes. At the end of each cycle, babies pass through a brief period of light sleep where they often wake — in contrast to adults, who typically transition back into the next cycle without fully waking. This is why newborns wake frequently and why “sleeping through” is not developmentally achievable for most babies in the early months.
What helps in the newborn period: darkness and quiet are not necessarily the goal — newborns spent 9 months in a noisy, constantly-moving environment. Many sleep better with white noise and movement (pram, sling, rocker) in the early weeks. This is biologically appropriate and does not create bad habits that must be “broken” — your baby will change rapidly and what works at 6 weeks will not be needed at 6 months.
③ Wake Windows — Why They Matter
A wake window is the amount of time a baby can comfortably be awake between sleeps before becoming overtired. Putting a baby to sleep too early (undertired) means they take a long time to settle and may sleep briefly. Putting them to sleep too late (overtired) means cortisol and adrenaline make it harder to fall and stay asleep — the classic “too tired to sleep” state.
Wake windows are the most reliable tool for timing sleep, because they account for your individual baby’s tiredness rather than following a fixed-time schedule that may or may not match their rhythm.
| Age | Wake window | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0–6 weeks | 45–60 minutes | Some newborns manage only 30–45 min; watch for tired cues |
| 6–12 weeks | 60–90 minutes | Growing gradually; last window before bed often longest |
| 3–5 months | 90 min–2 hours | 4-month regression typically occurs in this window |
| 5–8 months | 2–2.5 hours | 3-nap to 2-nap transition usually happens in this range |
| 8–12 months | 2.5–3.5 hours | Last wake window before bed often 3–3.5 hours |
| 12–18 months | 3.5–5 hours | 2-nap to 1-nap transition; window before bed extends |
Reading tired cues
Rather than watching the clock exclusively, watch your baby. Early tired cues: decreased activity, quieter, staring into the distance, yawning, rubbing eyes. Late tired cues: fussing, crying, arching back, difficulty being settled. Aim to begin the wind-down routine at the first early cues — by the time late cues appear, the cortisol spike has already begun.
④ Creating a Sleep-Friendly Environment
The sleep environment is one of the few aspects of infant sleep you can reliably control. The elements that have the strongest evidence base:
Darkness
Darkness is the most impactful environmental variable for sleep, because melatonin production (the hormone that promotes sleep) is triggered by darkness and suppressed by light. From around 3–4 months, as the circadian rhythm develops, a dark room becomes increasingly important for both settling and maintaining sleep. Blackout blinds or liners are the most cost-effective sleep investment you can make. A room dark enough that you cannot clearly see your hand in front of you is the target. For naps in particular, darkness significantly reduces early waking.
White noise
White noise or pink noise (a softer variant) mimics the sound environment of the womb and masks household noise that causes startle-waking. It is particularly effective in the newborn period and through sleep regressions. The recommended volume is approximately 65 dB — roughly the volume of a shower — placed at least 2 metres from the baby. Continuous white noise is more effective than sound that switches off, as sound cues the transition between sleep cycles. White noise has a strong evidence base for reducing infant sleep disruption and has no known harm at appropriate volumes.
Temperature
The ideal room temperature for infant sleep is 16–20°C. Overheating is a risk factor for SIDS — err cooler rather than warmer. A sleeping bag of the appropriate tog for the room temperature is the simplest way to manage temperature without loose bedding. The Lullaby Trust provides a free tog guide based on room temperature.
⑤ Nap Transitions by Age
Nap transitions — the reduction in number of naps from 4–5 down to zero — happen gradually and are frequently accompanied by temporary sleep disruption. Understanding when each transition typically occurs helps you recognise it when it happens rather than interpreting the disruption as regression or a problem.
The 4th catnap becomes harder to achieve as the baby’s wake windows lengthen. Signs: baby is alert and happy at the 4th nap time, resists the nap, or takes only a very short one. When the 3-nap schedule feels natural, the 4th nap can be dropped.
Watch for: Bedtime moving earlier as the 4th nap drops — typically shifting from 8–9pm to 7–7:30pm.The 3rd nap becomes vestigial as the 2nd nap lengthens and the wake window before bed extends. Signs: baby resists the 3rd nap or it starts pushing bedtime too late. Drop the 3rd nap and move bedtime earlier temporarily to compensate.
Watch for: Early waking in the morning as the first nap moves later — adjust the first nap time gradually.The most disruptive transition. The baby begins resisting the second nap or the first nap pushes bedtime too late. The transition can take 4–6 weeks as the single nap consolidates. An early bedtime (6–6:30pm temporarily) prevents overtiredness during the adjustment.
Watch for: Increased night waking and early morning rising during the transition week — this is temporary. A short “bridge nap” in the car or pram can help on particularly tired days.Most children drop their final nap between 3 and 5 years, though this varies widely. Signs: nap prevents night sleep or the child simply refuses to settle. Replace the nap with a quiet rest period and bring bedtime forward by 30–60 minutes initially.
Watch for: An afternoon “meltdown window” around 3–4pm for several weeks after dropping the nap — a quiet activity during this time helps bridge to bedtime.⑥ Sleep Training Methods — An Honest Overview
“Sleep training” covers a wide spectrum of approaches, from gradual parental withdrawal to structured crying-based methods. The evidence shows that all mainstream sleep training methods improve sleep outcomes for babies and parents without causing lasting harm. The right method is the one you feel comfortable implementing consistently — inconsistency is the main reason any method fails.
Sleep training is generally not recommended before 4–6 months, as babies before this age have genuine nutritional needs at night that cannot be overridden by scheduling. From 6 months, night feeds can be reduced for most babies of healthy weight — check with your health visitor before removing feeds entirely.
⑦ Sleep Regressions — What They Are and When
A sleep regression is a temporary period of disrupted sleep in a baby who was previously sleeping better. Despite the name, regressions are not steps backwards — they are usually signs of developmental leap, growth or transition that temporarily disrupts established sleep patterns. They pass on their own without intervention in most cases.
The most commonly recognised regressions occur at approximately 4 months, 8–10 months, 12 months, 18 months and 2 years. The 4-month regression is the most significant because it coincides with a permanent change in sleep architecture — the baby’s sleep cycles begin to mature to resemble adult patterns, which means the light-sleep transition between cycles becomes more wakeful. This is not a phase that passes — it is a developmental maturation that requires learning to self-settle at the lighter sleep point if night waking is to reduce.
Darkness, appropriate wake windows and a consistent bedtime routine are the foundation. Everything else is secondary.
The sleep advice industry is vast and often contradictory. The research consistently supports three things above all else: a dark sleep environment (from 3–4 months); age-appropriate wake windows that prevent both overtiredness and undertiredness; and a short, consistent bedtime routine that signals sleep is coming. White noise adds meaningfully to the first two. Everything else — specific schedules, clocks, apps, timed feeds — is secondary.
Sleep training works when parents implement it consistently, starting from a rested baseline and after ruling out medical causes (reflux, tongue tie, illness) for persistent waking. It does not work during illness, during travel, or immediately following a major developmental change. Use our free Sleep Schedule Generator to build an age-appropriate schedule for your baby.

