Toddler Nutrition Guide UK.
What they actually need.
What toddlers need to eat and drink from age 1 to 4, based on current NHS and SACN guidance — portions, key nutrients, what’s different from adult nutrition, and how to think about a day’s food without obsessing over every meal.
This guide reflects current NHS and SACN (Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition) guidance for toddler nutrition in the UK. It is general information, not personalised medical advice. If your toddler has specific dietary needs, allergies, or growth concerns, speak to your health visitor or GP for individual guidance.
How much toddlers need — the right frame
The most important shift when thinking about toddler nutrition is moving from meal-by-meal thinking to week-by-week thinking. A toddler whose individual meals look alarming — barely touching dinner, refusing lunch, eating only crackers at breakfast — may be getting entirely adequate nutrition across the week. Toddlers self-regulate caloric intake with surprising accuracy when a reasonable variety of food is available.
Between ages 1 and 4, a toddler needs approximately 1,000–1,400 kcal per day — significantly less than most parents expect, and considerably less than the child ate in the first year when growth was extraordinary. The appetite reduction between 12 and 18 months that alarms many parents is physiologically appropriate: growth has slowed, so caloric need has slowed with it.
Key nutrients — what to prioritise
Most toddlers eating a reasonably varied diet get adequate amounts of most nutrients. The ones most commonly deficient in toddler diets in the UK are worth specifically keeping an eye on:
Toddler portion sizes — a practical guide
Toddler portions are much smaller than adult portions. The most useful rule is that a toddler serving is roughly the size of their palm or fist. The following are approximate portions for a 2–3 year old — adjust slightly smaller for younger toddlers and slightly larger for older ones:
The food groups — what toddlers need from each
Starchy carbohydrates — at every meal
Bread, rice, pasta, potatoes, oats, crackers. These should form the base of most meals — they provide the energy a growing, active toddler needs. Wholegrain versions add fibre and nutrients but should not replace white or refined carbohydrates entirely in toddlers — too much fibre can be filling without being nutritionally adequate for small stomachs. A mix of white and wholegrain is the right approach.
Fruit and vegetables — aim for 5 portions across the day
Any form counts — fresh, frozen, tinned (in juice or water), dried. Frozen vegetables are nutritionally equivalent to fresh and often more convenient. A “portion” for a toddler is one tablespoon of vegetables or one small piece of fruit — much smaller than an adult portion. The 5-a-day target for toddlers is achievable even with limited variety: a banana at breakfast, some cucumber at lunch, peas and carrots with dinner, and a small portion of berries as a snack covers it.
Protein — 2 portions daily
Meat, fish, eggs, beans, lentils, nuts (as nut butter or ground — whole nuts are a choking risk for under-5s). Oily fish 1–2 times per week for omega-3. Red meat 3–4 times per week for iron. Eggs are particularly versatile — they provide high-quality protein, iron, vitamin D and choline and most toddlers accept them in multiple forms.
Dairy — 2–3 portions daily
Full-fat dairy is recommended for toddlers aged 1–2 because the fat provides calories and fat-soluble vitamins that semi-skimmed or skimmed cannot match. From age 2, semi-skimmed can be introduced if the child is eating well and growing normally; skimmed milk is not appropriate below age 5. If using plant-based milks, choose a fortified version with calcium and vitamin D — oat, almond and coconut milks are lower in protein than cow’s milk and are not equivalent nutritionally without fortification.
Drinks — what and how much
The NHS recommends the following for toddlers aged 1–4:
Water — the primary drink from age 1, alongside milk. Offer freely throughout the day. There is no defined minimum — toddlers self-regulate fluid intake well when water is freely available.
Full-fat cow’s milk — 300–400ml per day (roughly 1–1.5 cups) is adequate. More than 500ml per day can reduce appetite for solid foods and, in the context of a varied diet, is unnecessary. Milk remains an important source of calcium, protein and fat at this age.
Fruit juice — maximum 150ml of unsweetened juice per day, diluted 1:1 with water, at mealtimes only. Juice is high in natural sugars and its acidity damages tooth enamel. It is not a necessary part of the toddler diet and is best treated as an occasional addition rather than a daily drink.
Avoid entirely: squash, fizzy drinks (including diet versions), tea and coffee, milkshakes and flavoured milks with added sugar. These have no place in a toddler’s daily diet.
What a nutritionally good toddler day looks like
This is not a prescription — it is an illustration of how nutritional needs can be met across a typical day without complicated meal preparation:
Supplements — what the NHS recommends
The NHS recommends the following supplements for all children aged 6 months to 5 years in the UK:
Vitamin D — 10mcg (400 IU) daily. UK sunlight is insufficient for adequate vitamin D synthesis for most of the year, and dietary sources are limited. This supplement is recommended regardless of diet. Vitamin D supplements for children are widely available as drops (easier to administer to toddlers than tablets).
Vitamin A — 233mcg daily; Vitamin C — 15mg daily. Also recommended by the NHS for 6 months to 5 years, particularly for toddlers who eat a limited diet. These are included in most children’s vitamin drops (such as the NHS’s Healthy Start vitamins).
Families eligible for the Healthy Start scheme can receive free vitamins — check eligibility at healthystart.nhs.uk. For all other families, children’s vitamin drops containing vitamins A, C and D are widely available from pharmacies and supermarkets.
Most toddlers eating any varied diet are fine. The supplements matter more than perfecting every meal.
Toddler nutrition anxiety is extremely common and frequently disproportionate to the actual nutritional risk. A toddler who eats a limited but varied diet — some protein, some dairy, some carbohydrate, some fruit or vegetables — is almost certainly meeting their nutritional needs when assessed across a week. The most commonly deficient nutrients in UK toddlers are vitamin D (where a supplement is recommended for all children regardless of diet) and iron (where red meat, fortified cereals and vitamin C alongside iron-rich foods are the practical solutions).
The most useful thing most parents can do is: give the vitamin D supplement daily, keep offering variety without pressure, eat together when possible, and step back from the specific content of individual meals. A good week’s eating matters far more than any individual meal.

