Night Training & Bed-Wetting Guide UK.
A separate process, on its own timeline.
Night dryness is not an extension of daytime potty training — it is a separate physiological process controlled by a hormone that develops on its own timeline. This guide explains what’s happening, when to start, how to approach it and when bed-wetting warrants medical attention.
This guide covers night training and bed-wetting (nocturnal enuresis) for children aged 3–8 years. For daytime potty training, see our complete potty training guide. If you have concerns about your child’s bed-wetting pattern, speak to your GP — treatment options are available and effective for children who need them.
Why night training is completely separate from daytime
The single most important thing to understand about night dryness is that it is not a skill that can be taught in the way daytime potty training is. Daytime dryness involves the child learning to recognise the sensation of a full bladder, delay urination and reach a toilet — all of which are learnable skills. Night dryness is controlled by a different mechanism entirely.
During deep sleep, the body needs to reduce urine production to avoid the bladder overfilling. This is done by releasing antidiuretic hormone (ADH/vasopressin), which signals the kidneys to concentrate urine and produce less of it. Children who wet the bed at night are almost always doing so because their body is not yet producing enough ADH during sleep — not because they are being lazy, inattentive or poorly trained.
This hormonal production develops at its own pace. It cannot be accelerated by training, by lifting (waking the child to use the toilet at night), or by restricting fluids. It typically develops between ages 3 and 7 for most children, but the range is wide. The average age of reliable night dryness in the UK is approximately 3.5 years, but many children are not consistently dry at night until age 5, 6 or later.
How common bed-wetting is — the data
These figures put the scale in perspective. Bed-wetting is not unusual — it is the normal state for a significant proportion of primary-school-aged children, and the majority resolve without any treatment. The spontaneous resolution rate of approximately 15% per year means that even without intervention, most children who wet the bed at 5 will be dry by 8.
Signs of readiness for night training
Night training should not begin until genuine readiness signs are present — because unlike daytime potty training, starting before physiological readiness does nothing except create more wet beds and more parental work.
How to approach night training
The practical setup
Waterproof mattress protector
Non-negotiable. Put two on — a fitted sheet over the first protector, then a second protector and sheet on top. If there’s a night accident, you strip the top layer and the bed is ready immediately without a 3am mattress change.
Potty in the bedroom
A potty within reach removes the barrier of a dark corridor to the bathroom. Some children wake needing to go but won’t make the journey to the bathroom — a bedside potty eliminates this.
Night light on the route
A dim night light from bedroom to bathroom removes the fear barrier that prevents some children from getting up when they need to wee. Plug-in motion-sensor lights work well.
Penultimate wee at bedtime
Encourage a toilet visit as the last thing before sleep — after the story, before lights out. Don’t frame it as “wee now so you won’t wet the bed”; frame it as part of the routine.
What doesn’t work — and why
Lifting: waking the child at 11pm to use the toilet prevents a wet bed in the short term but does not accelerate the development of night dryness. The child is being woken from deep sleep and not learning to respond to their own bladder signals. Most families find lifting needs to continue indefinitely without progress. It is not harmful but it does not help the underlying process.
Restricting fluids: limiting drinks before bed in an attempt to reduce the volume of urine produced does not meaningfully accelerate night dryness and may be counterproductive — concentrated urine is more irritating to the bladder and may actually increase urgency. The NHS specifically advises against fluid restriction for bed-wetting. Children should drink normally throughout the day, tapering naturally in the evening.
Punishing or shaming: has no effect on the physiological process and significant negative effects on the child’s wellbeing. Bed-wetting that causes significant distress, anxiety or shame is bed-wetting that requires professional input — not more pressure.
Bed-wetting after training — what helps
If a child has been consistently dry at night and then begins wetting the bed again, this is regression — usually triggered by stress, illness, a developmental change or a new situation such as starting school. Regression bed-wetting in a previously dry child should be approached calmly, without pressure, and with a return to waterproof protection while it resolves. If it persists beyond 4–6 weeks without an obvious trigger resolving, speak to your GP.
For children who have never been reliably dry at night past age 5–6, the following approaches have good evidence from NICE guidelines:
Bed-wetting alarms
A small sensor in the child’s underwear detects moisture and triggers an alarm that wakes the child (and usually the parent). Over 8–16 weeks, the alarm conditions the child to wake in response to bladder signals before wetting occurs. Bed-wetting alarms have the strongest evidence base of any bed-wetting intervention in children aged 5+ — more effective long-term than medication for most children who use them consistently. They require significant commitment and parental involvement — the alarm wakes the whole household — but the results are lasting.
Desmopressin (DDAVP)
A synthetic form of the ADH hormone that the body isn’t yet producing sufficiently. Available on NHS prescription. Effective for reducing wet nights during periods when dryness is specifically needed — sleepovers, school trips, family holidays. Does not cure bed-wetting but provides reliable short-term control. Requires GP prescription and should not be used alongside high fluid intake.
When to seek GP advice
NICE guidance recommends considering referral to a specialist enuresis clinic for children who are still wetting the bed regularly at age 7 or above, or earlier if the bed-wetting is causing significant distress. In practice, GPs will often refer or offer treatment from age 5–6 for children and families who are finding bed-wetting significantly disruptive.
| Situation | What to do |
|---|---|
| Child is 5–6 and wetting 4+ nights per week | Speak to GP — a bed-wetting alarm is usually the first-line recommendation at this age. Waiting is also acceptable if the family is not distressed by it. |
| Child was dry and has started wetting again | If recent regression with obvious trigger (new sibling, school start, illness), manage at home. If persists 4–6 weeks without resolving, or no clear trigger, see GP to rule out UTI or other cause. |
| Child is 7+ and still regularly wetting | NICE recommends active treatment — GP referral or school nurse for enuresis clinic assessment. An alarm or desmopressin may be offered. |
| Bed-wetting is causing significant distress | Don’t wait for a specific age — speak to GP. Distress is sufficient reason to seek help regardless of the child’s age. Treatment options exist and are effective. |
| Wetting during the day as well as night | Daytime wetting alongside night wetting has different causes and warrants earlier assessment. Speak to GP. |
| New wetting in a previously dry child accompanied by other symptoms | Urgency, frequency, pain or increased thirst alongside bed-wetting may indicate UTI or other medical cause. See GP promptly. |
Night dryness cannot be hurried. Wait for readiness, protect the mattress, and seek help if it’s causing distress past age 5–6.
The most common mistake with night training is starting before the physiological readiness is present — consistently dry morning nappies over two weeks. Before that, nothing will accelerate the process and the additional wet beds serve no purpose. When readiness is clear, the practical setup (double-layer bedding, bedside potty, night light) makes the nights significantly more manageable.
For families where bed-wetting is causing distress — for the child, who may feel embarrassed, or for the family managing multiple wet nights per week — effective treatment is available from the NHS and works well. There is no reason to manage significant bed-wetting indefinitely without seeking help. Contact your GP or school nurse.

