TL;DR
- Contact naps are fine in the early months but harder to sustain long-term.
- Wake windows are the key to good naps. Watch the clock and your baby's cues.
- The crib is the best nap location for quality sleep, but any safe sleep space works.
- Nap training is harder than nighttime training. Be patient.
How Many Naps at This Age
Naps are one of the trickiest parts of baby sleep. Daytime sleep operates on different biological drives than nighttime sleep, which is why a child who sleeps great at night can be a terrible napper (and vice versa).
Short naps are developmentally normal for babies under 5 months. Their sleep cycles are about 30 to 45 minutes, and they have not yet learned to connect cycles. This usually improves naturally with age.
The morning nap is typically the first to lengthen and become predictable. It is driven by circadian rhythm. The afternoon nap is driven by homeostatic sleep pressure (how tired your child is).
Contact naps are wonderful for bonding, but they can become a habit that is hard to break. If you want crib naps, start working on at least one crib nap per day while allowing contact naps for the others.
A short pre-nap routine (5 to 10 minutes) helps signal that it is time to sleep. Close the curtains, put on white noise, read a short book, and lay your child down. Keep it simple and consistent.
One thing that surprises many parents is how much consistency matters. It is not about being rigid or inflexible. It is about giving your child the same cues, at roughly the same times, so their body and brain can predict what comes next. When sleep becomes predictable, it becomes easier.
Ideal Nap Timing and Length
Contact naps are wonderful for bonding, but they can become a habit that is hard to break. If you want crib naps, start working on at least one crib nap per day while allowing contact naps for the others.
| Transition | Typical Age | Signs Ready | How Long to Complete |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 naps to 3 | 3-4 months | Resisting 4th nap, longer wake windows | 1-2 weeks |
| 3 naps to 2 | 6-8 months | Fighting 3rd nap, bedtime too late | 1-2 weeks |
| 2 naps to 1 | 13-18 months | Consistently refusing morning nap, pushing it later | 2-4 weeks |
| 1 nap to 0 | 3-5 years | Not falling asleep at nap, bedtime push late | Several weeks to months |
A short pre-nap routine (5 to 10 minutes) helps signal that it is time to sleep. Close the curtains, put on white noise, read a short book, and lay your child down. Keep it simple and consistent.
Nap transitions are some of the hardest periods in baby sleep. When your child is between two nap schedules, you may see short naps, bedtime battles, and extra crankiness. This is temporary.
Keeping a simple sleep log for a few days can reveal patterns you would otherwise miss. Note bedtime, wake time, nap times, night wakings, and how your child seemed (happy, fussy, overtired). Three to five days of data is usually enough to spot the issue.
Creating the Right Nap Environment
The 2 to 1 nap transition (dropping to one nap) is the most challenging. It typically happens between 13 and 18 months. Do not rush it. Many babies flirt with one nap but still need two for several more weeks.
If your child takes a long morning nap and a short afternoon nap, try capping the morning nap to preserve sleep pressure for the afternoon. This often fixes the 'one good nap, one bad nap' pattern.
Nap refusal does not always mean your child is ready to drop a nap. Illness, teething, developmental leaps, and schedule issues can all cause temporary nap resistance.
SleepCoach builds a nap plan around your child's specific patterns, adjusting wake windows and nap timing as your child grows and their sleep needs change.
Naps are one of the trickiest parts of baby sleep. Daytime sleep operates on different biological drives than nighttime sleep, which is why a child who sleeps great at night can be a terrible napper (and vice versa).
Many parents feel pressure to get sleep 'right' from the start. The truth is that baby sleep is a moving target. What works at 3 months may not work at 6 months, and what works at 6 months will definitely not work at 18 months. Adapting is part of the process.
Your pediatrician is your first resource for health-related sleep concerns. If your child snores, breathes through their mouth, seems excessively sleepy during the day, or has other symptoms beyond normal sleep struggles, get a medical evaluation before making changes to the sleep plan.
What to Do About Short Naps
SleepCoach builds a nap plan around your child's specific patterns, adjusting wake windows and nap timing as your child grows and their sleep needs change.
Naps are one of the trickiest parts of baby sleep. Daytime sleep operates on different biological drives than nighttime sleep, which is why a child who sleeps great at night can be a terrible napper (and vice versa).
Short naps are developmentally normal for babies under 5 months. Their sleep cycles are about 30 to 45 minutes, and they have not yet learned to connect cycles. This usually improves naturally with age.
The morning nap is typically the first to lengthen and become predictable. It is driven by circadian rhythm. The afternoon nap is driven by homeostatic sleep pressure (how tired your child is).
There is no perfect age to address sleep. Whether your child is 4 months or 4 years, the principles of good sleep hygiene apply. Start where you are, with what you have, and make changes gradually.
If you are reading this at 2am with a baby who will not sleep, know that you are not alone. Millions of parents are going through exactly the same thing right now. It gets better, especially when you have a plan.
Nap Training Strategies
The morning nap is typically the first to lengthen and become predictable. It is driven by circadian rhythm. The afternoon nap is driven by homeostatic sleep pressure (how tired your child is).
Contact naps are wonderful for bonding, but they can become a habit that is hard to break. If you want crib naps, start working on at least one crib nap per day while allowing contact naps for the others.
A short pre-nap routine (5 to 10 minutes) helps signal that it is time to sleep. Close the curtains, put on white noise, read a short book, and lay your child down. Keep it simple and consistent.
Nap transitions are some of the hardest periods in baby sleep. When your child is between two nap schedules, you may see short naps, bedtime battles, and extra crankiness. This is temporary.
It helps to remember that sleep is a skill, not a trait. Just like learning to walk or talk, learning to sleep independently takes time and practice. Some children pick it up quickly. Others need more support. Neither timeline is wrong.
Related Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are my baby's naps so short?
Short naps (30 to 45 minutes) are common under 5 months. After that, short naps usually indicate a wake window issue (too short or too long), a sleep association problem, or an environmental factor.
What if my baby only naps in the car or stroller?
Motion naps are lighter and less restorative than stationary naps. Gradually transition to crib naps by starting with one crib nap per day (the morning nap is usually easiest).
How many naps does my baby need?
Newborns take 4 to 5 naps. By 4 months, most are on 3 naps. By 7 to 8 months, 2 naps. By 13 to 18 months, 1 nap. By 3 to 5 years, most children drop naps entirely.
Get Your Personalized Sleep Plan
Every child is different. SleepCoach builds a plan around your child's age, temperament, and specific sleep challenges. You get nightly scripts, weekly check-ins, and a plan that adapts as your child grows.
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