Baby Sleep Guide UK 2026 Routines, Wake Windows and Sleep Training Explained
A complete practical guide to baby sleep from birth to 12 months — wake windows by age, how to build a routine, understanding regressions, and an honest assessment of every sleep training approach.
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Our Wake Window Calculator gives you precise age-appropriate wake windows and suggested nap times based on your baby’s date of birth.
Baby sleep is one of the most discussed, most Googled, and most anxiety-inducing aspects of new parenthood. This guide aims to provide clear, evidence-based information about what is developmentally normal at each age, what genuinely helps, and what does not — without judgment about any particular approach. Before reading this guide, confirm your baby’s sleep environment is set up safely using our Safe Sleep Guide and Safe Sleep Checker.
① Newborn Sleep — What Is Actually Normal
Newborns sleep between 14–17 hours in a 24-hour period, but not in the long consolidated stretches adults require. Sleep cycles in newborns are approximately 45–50 minutes — shorter than adult sleep cycles — and they spend a much higher proportion of time in REM sleep, which is lighter and more easily disturbed. Night waking every 2–3 hours is biologically normal in the first months and serves an important function: frequent feeding drives milk supply, prevents dangerous hypoglycaemia, and the Lullaby Trust notes that arousal from sleep may actually be a protective mechanism against SIDS.
This stage is characterised by short wake periods, frequent feeding and no discernible pattern. Circadian rhythms — the biological clock that drives day/night sleep differentiation — are not yet developed. There is no point trying to introduce a routine before 6–8 weeks. Focus entirely on feeding, safe sleep, and your own survival. Our newborn sleep guide covers this stage in much more detail.
Circadian rhythms begin to develop around 6–8 weeks. Babies start distinguishing day from night. Night sleep begins consolidating into longer stretches. You can start supporting this development by exposing the baby to natural light during the day, keeping night feeds quiet and unstimulating, and beginning a simple pre-sleep wind-down. This is not yet a structured routine — it is gently introducing the conditions that make longer sleep possible.
By 3–4 months, most babies are developmentally ready to begin a simple nap routine. Two or three naps per day emerge. Night sleep for many babies consolidates to a longer initial stretch (3–5 hours) followed by more frequent waking. Note: some babies sleep through the night by 4 months; others continue waking 3–4 times at 12 months. Both are within the normal range. The 4-month sleep regression typically occurs in this window — see the regressions section below.
Two naps per day is typical from around 6–8 months. Many babies transition from 3 to 2 naps around 6–7 months. Weaning begins around 6 months, which can temporarily affect sleep as the digestive system adjusts. The 8–10 month period often involves a regression linked to developmental leaps in mobility and object permanence. This is also the period when many families choose to move the baby to their own room — after the NHS’s recommended six months of room sharing. See our nap transitions guide for navigating each nap drop.
② Wake Windows by Age
A wake window is the period a baby can comfortably stay awake between sleeps before becoming overtired. Overtired babies produce cortisol — a stress hormone — which paradoxically makes it harder to fall asleep and stay asleep. Getting the wake window right is the single most practical tool for improving nap quality and nighttime sleep. Use our Wake Window Calculator for precise timing based on your baby’s exact age.
| Age | Wake window | Naps per day | Total day sleep |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 weeks | 45–60 mins | 4–6 | 7–9 hrs |
| 6–12 weeks | 60–90 mins | 4–5 | 5–7 hrs |
| 3–4 months | 1.5–2 hrs | 3–4 | 4–6 hrs |
| 5–6 months | 2–2.5 hrs | 3 | 3–4 hrs |
| 7–8 months | 2.5–3 hrs | 2 | 2.5–3.5 hrs |
| 9–11 months | 3–3.5 hrs | 2 | 2–3 hrs |
| 12 months | 3.5–4 hrs | 1–2 | 2–3 hrs |
③ Building a Routine — When and How
A routine gives a baby predictability — the ability to anticipate what comes next, which reduces arousal and supports settling. The evidence on structured baby routines is that they are beneficial for sleep when introduced at the right developmental stage and done without rigidity. They are counterproductive before 6–8 weeks when the baby’s circadian system is not yet functional.
The difference between a schedule and a routine
A schedule is clock-based: baby naps at 9am, 1pm, and 4pm regardless of tiredness. A routine is sequence-based: baby naps after a consistent set of pre-sleep cues — dim light, sleeping bag, white noise, feed. The evidence favours sequence-based routines over rigid clock schedules for young babies, because infant wake windows shift significantly over the first year. A sequence the baby associates with sleep is portable, flexible, and does not require maintaining specific clock times.
A simple bedtime routine that works
Most effective bedtime routines take 20–30 minutes and follow the same sequence every night. A typical structure: last feed of the day (in a different room from the bedroom if possible), bath, massage or pyjamas, sleeping bag on, book or song in a dim room, put down awake or drowsy. The bath is not essential — the ritual and sequence matter more than the specific elements. What matters is that the sequence is consistent and the baby begins associating it with sleep.
When to start a routine
A bedtime routine can begin from around 6–8 weeks. A nap routine — where naps happen at roughly consistent times or after consistent cues — is more practical from 3–4 months when the baby’s wake windows are long enough to make timing predictable. Before this, follow the baby’s cues and keep night conditions consistent.
④ Settling Techniques — What Works and When
Contact napping
Contact napping — holding the baby while they sleep — is biologically normal in the newborn period and many babies will only nap this way in the first weeks. It is not a habit that “needs breaking” — it is an appropriate developmental response. If contact napping is working for your family, there is no need to change it. If you want to transition to independent napping, the gradual withdrawal method works well from around 3–4 months.
White noise
White noise — consistent broadband noise at a moderate volume — has good evidence for improving settling and extending sleep cycles in young babies. It works by masking environmental noise that might otherwise cause arousal. Use at a consistent volume (around 65 dB, comparable to a running shower), position the machine outside the sleep space rather than inside the cot, and do not increase volume over time. Our best white noise machines guide covers the specific products worth buying.
Feeding to sleep
Feeding to sleep is one of the most common settling strategies for young babies and is entirely normal and appropriate. The concern raised by some sleep consultants — that feeding to sleep creates a sleep association that prevents independent settling — is valid in the sense that a baby who always feeds to sleep may need to feed to resettle between sleep cycles. Whether this is a problem depends on whether it is a problem for your family. Many parents feed to sleep happily for months or years. If you want to reduce feed-to-sleep association, the goal is to finish the feed while the baby is still slightly awake and drowsy rather than fully asleep.
Settling tools
A white noise machine, a baby sleeping bag, blackout blinds, and a consistent bedtime sequence are the four most evidence-supported environmental settling supports. Swaddling from birth to around 2 months (when rolling begins) can be effective for newborns who startle easily. Our Safe Sleep Checker confirms whether your settling setup is safe.
⑤ Sleep Regressions — What They Are and Are Not
A sleep regression is a period of disrupted sleep in a previously settled baby, typically associated with a developmental leap. The term is widely used but loosely defined — it covers any period of increased night waking or difficulty settling that parents report as a change from baseline. The most commonly cited regressions occur at 4 months, 8–10 months, 12 months, 18 months, and 2 years.
The 4-month regression — why it is different
The 4-month regression is the most significant and the most misunderstood. Unlike later regressions which are temporary disruptions to an established sleep architecture, the 4-month regression represents a permanent change in sleep structure. Around 3–4 months, infant sleep architecture matures to become more similar to adult sleep — lighter cycles, more arousal between cycles, and a need to resettle independently that was not previously required. Babies who were settling well before 4 months often begin waking more frequently not because of a regression but because their sleep has genuinely changed and their existing settling strategies no longer work as effectively.
What actually helps during a regression
Maintaining consistent routines and wake windows is more helpful than introducing new settling strategies during a regression. Adding rocking, feeding or other contact settling to fix a regression typically extends the disruption because those strategies become new associations. The most effective approach is to hold the routine as steady as possible, accept that some additional settling is temporarily needed, and wait. Most regressions resolve within 2–6 weeks. If disruption persists beyond 6 weeks, it is usually worth reviewing wake windows with our Wake Window Calculator — often the baby has outgrown their current schedule rather than being in an ongoing regression.
⑥ Sleep Training — Methods Explained Honestly
Sleep training describes any approach designed to help a baby learn to fall asleep independently. There are several methods, ranging from no-cry approaches to more structured intervals. The evidence base for all methods shows they are effective at reducing night waking and settling time when applied consistently. The choice between methods is primarily a values decision about what parents are comfortable with, not a safety question — no established sleep training method has been shown to cause harm to babies.
Gradual withdrawal (no-cry)
The parent begins by being present at settling and gradually reduces their involvement over days or weeks — moving from holding to sitting next to the cot, to sitting by the door, to leaving the room. This approach takes longer than extinction-based methods but involves less crying. It works well from around 4–6 months. The risk is inconsistency — if parents vary their proximity, the baby has no consistent expectation to calibrate against.
Ferber / graduated extinction
The parent puts the baby down awake, leaves, and returns at increasing time intervals (2 minutes, 5 minutes, 10 minutes) to briefly reassure without picking up. Picking up resets the interval. Most families see significant improvement within 3–7 days. Suitable from around 5–6 months. This approach involves more crying than gradual withdrawal but less than full extinction.
Full extinction (cry it out)
The parent puts the baby down awake and does not return until morning (or the next scheduled feed). This approach has the strongest evidence base for fastest results and typically works within 1–3 nights. It is not recommended before 6 months and is not appropriate for all families. Multiple studies have found no long-term psychological harm from full extinction sleep training.
Chair method
The parent sits in a chair in the room while the baby falls asleep, moving the chair progressively further from the cot over one to two weeks. Similar to gradual withdrawal but with a chair as a marker. Works well for parents who find leaving the room distressing.
⑦ Moving to Their Own Room
The NHS recommends room sharing for at least the first six months. After six months, moving your baby to their own room in a cot is safe and appropriate. The transition can be made gradually — starting with daytime naps in the new room before night sleep — or all at once. Set up a baby monitor before the first night. Confirm the new sleep environment is safe using our Safe Sleep Checker with the new room parameters.
Does the move affect sleep?
Some babies sleep better in their own room immediately — they are less disturbed by adult movement and sound. Others take a few nights to settle in the new environment. Maintaining the bedtime routine sequence consistently through the transition is the most effective way to minimise disruption. Some parents find a piece of their clothing placed near (but not in) the cot helps during the first nights as the baby adjusts to the new scent environment.
⑧ Night Waking — What Is Normal at Each Age
Night waking is normal throughout the first year. The expectation that babies should sleep through the night (typically defined as 7pm–7am without waking) is not developmentally realistic for most babies before 6–9 months, and many babies continue waking until 12 months or beyond. Research shows that approximately 25–30 percent of 12-month-olds still wake once or more per night. This is a developmental variation, not a problem.
However, if night waking is unsustainable for your family — either in frequency, duration, or the difficulty of resettling — that is a valid reason to consider sleep training. The frequency of waking matters less than the impact it has on family functioning. Our nap transitions guide covers how daytime sleep changes affect nighttime waking through the first two years.
There is no one right answer to baby sleep
Baby sleep is deeply personal — determined by your baby’s temperament, your family’s situation, and what is sustainable for you. The enormous variation in how babies sleep — and in what parents find manageable — means that advice that works perfectly for one family may be irrelevant or harmful for another.
The most useful framework is: keep the safe sleep environment correct (our safe sleep guide covers this), understand your baby’s wake windows (our Wake Window Calculator gives you the numbers), maintain a consistent sequence, and make decisions about sleep training based on what is sustainable for your whole family — not on what worked for someone else’s baby.

