Toddler Nap Transitions.
2-to-1, and dropping naps entirely.
When toddlers are ready to move from two naps to one — and eventually to no nap — is rarely a clean moment. This guide covers the signs, the timing, exactly how to manage both transitions, and what to do when it goes wrong.
This guide covers the two main toddler nap transitions: 2 naps to 1 (typically 12–18 months) and 1 nap to none (typically 2.5–4 years). For full toddler sleep guidance including schedules and common problems, see our toddler sleep guide.
The 2-to-1 nap transition
Most toddlers move from two naps to one between 12 and 18 months, with the average around 14–15 months. It is one of the most disruptive sleep transitions in the first three years — more disruptive than it appears it should be, because the toddler is not tired enough for two naps but cannot yet comfortably manage the wake windows required for one. The transition period typically takes 4–6 weeks before a new rhythm consolidates.
Some toddlers make this transition as early as 11 months; others not until 18 months. Both are within the normal range. The transition should be led by the child’s readiness, not by a calendar date or nursery requirement.
Signs of readiness — both transitions
Signs the 2-to-1 transition is needed
Signs the 1-to-0 transition is needed
How to manage the 2-to-1 transition
The cleanest method is a gradual push of the morning nap — later and later over 1–2 weeks — until it has shifted to a midday nap. This avoids a dramatic day-one change and gives the child’s body clock time to adjust.
Dropping naps entirely — the 1-to-0 transition
Most children stop napping between 2.5 and 4 years, with the UK average around 3 years. Some children maintain a nap until 5; a few drop it as early as 2. There is no correct age — the nap should be dropped when the child is genuinely not sleeping at nap time consistently, and is coping well enough without it at a reasonable bedtime.
How to manage the drop
Don’t drop it abruptly. Instead, alternate nap and no-nap days for 1–2 weeks. On no-nap days, move bedtime significantly earlier — often 6–6:30pm — to prevent the overtiredness spiral. Gradually shift more days to no-nap as the child adjusts. Most families find the 1-to-0 transition takes 3–6 weeks to fully consolidate.
Move bedtime earlier immediately. This is the most commonly missed step. A child who has been napping until 3pm and going to bed at 7:30pm needs a 6:30pm bedtime once the nap is dropped. Parents who keep bedtime at 7:30pm on no-nap days end up with an overtired, difficult-to-settle child and conclude the nap is still needed — when in fact the problem is the late bedtime.
Expect variation. Some days a 3-year-old will fall asleep in the car or at 5pm on the sofa. This is normal during the transition. A brief accidental nap that ends by 4pm is fine — it won’t dramatically affect night sleep. A nap that ends at 5pm will.
Quiet time — keeping rest without the nap
When the nap goes, quiet time at the former nap slot preserves something valuable: a rest period that benefits both the child and the parent. Most children benefit from 45–60 minutes of calm, low-stimulation activity in their room during the early afternoon, even if they are not sleeping.
Quiet time works best when: it happens at the same time each day (the body clock still responds to the rhythm even without sleep); the child is in their room rather than the living room; the activity is calm — audio books, soft toys, looking at books — rather than active or screen-based; and the parent is genuinely not present rather than hovering. Children who initially resist quiet time almost always adapt within 1–2 weeks if it is consistent.
For parents, quiet time preserves the daily rest that makes the rest of the day manageable. It is worth protecting even when the child stops sleeping during it.
Troubleshooting common problems
| Problem | Most likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| 2-to-1: nap fine but night sleep is terrible | Single nap ending too late or too long — reducing sleep pressure at night | Cap the nap at 1.5 hrs; ensure it ends by 2:30–3pm; move bedtime earlier |
| 2-to-1: can’t make it to midday without melting down | Transition started too early — child not ready yet | Return to two naps for 4–6 weeks and try again. Offer a short morning nap (30 min) and extend it gradually |
| 2-to-1: nap is inconsistent — some days one nap, some days two | Normal during the 4–6 week transition period | Follow the child’s lead day-to-day. Two-nap days happen — that’s okay. Adjust bedtime earlier on heavy tired days |
| 1-to-0: child falls asleep at dinner or in the car at 5pm | Overtiredness — bedtime is too late for a no-nap day | Move bedtime to 6–6:30pm. A brief accidental nap ending by 4pm is fine; one ending at 5pm affects night sleep |
| 1-to-0: child is clearly still tired without the nap | May not be ready; or the no-nap bedtime is still too late | First try earlier bedtime (6–6:30pm). If still overtired consistently, return to napping for 4–6 weeks |
| Nursery wants no nap but child still needs one | Nursery schedule vs child readiness mismatch | Talk to the nursery — most are flexible. A child who genuinely needs a nap should have one; overtiredness affects behaviour and development. Some nurseries offer quiet rest even if not all children sleep |
Both transitions are led by the child. Earlier bedtime is almost always the answer when things go wrong.
The two most common mistakes across both nap transitions are: making the change before the child is genuinely ready (produces overtiredness, worse night sleep, and a miserable few weeks), and not moving bedtime earlier to compensate (produces the same outcome by a different route). Readiness-led transitions with a significantly earlier bedtime on difficult days are the formula that works most consistently.
The transition periods are temporary — typically 4–6 weeks of adjustment before a new rhythm consolidates. On the other side is a simpler schedule, a more predictable day, and — eventually — the afternoon that is entirely your own.

