TL;DR
- Early bedtime (6:30 to 7:30pm) works best for most babies and toddlers.
- Nap lengths affect bedtime. Cap naps if bedtime is being pushed too late.
- Sample schedules are starting points. Watch your child's cues to fine-tune.
- A well-timed schedule prevents overtiredness and reduces night wakings.
Recommended Sleep Schedule
The right schedule prevents most sleep problems before they start. When your child sleeps at the right times, with the right amount of wake time in between, falling asleep becomes easier and night wakings decrease.
Wake windows are the amount of awake time between sleep periods. They increase as your child grows. Getting these right is the single most impactful thing you can do for your child's sleep.
Clock-based schedules work well for older toddlers and preschoolers who have predictable patterns. For babies under 12 months, following wake windows is usually more effective than watching the clock.
Total sleep in 24 hours decreases as your child ages. A newborn needs 14 to 17 hours. A 2 year old needs 11 to 14 hours. If your child is getting too much daytime sleep, nighttime will suffer.
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.
Sleep is not just about nighttime. What happens during the day, from feeding patterns to activity levels to light exposure, directly affects how well your child sleeps at night. A well-structured day sets the stage for a smooth night.
Wake Windows and Timing
Total sleep in 24 hours decreases as your child ages. A newborn needs 14 to 17 hours. A 2 year old needs 11 to 14 hours. If your child is getting too much daytime sleep, nighttime will suffer.
| Age | Wake Window |
|---|---|
| Newborn | 45-60 min |
| 1 month | 45-75 min |
| 2 months | 60-90 min |
| 3 months | 75-120 min |
| 4 months | 1.5-2.25 hrs |
| 5 months | 2-2.5 hrs |
| 6 months | 2-3 hrs |
| 7-8 months | 2.5-3.5 hrs |
| 9-10 months | 3-4 hrs |
| 11-12 months | 3-4 hrs |
| 13-18 months | 4-5.5 hrs |
| 18-24 months | 4.5-5.5 hrs |
| 2-3 years | 5-6 hrs |
Early bedtime is not just for convenience. Research shows that children who go to bed between 7 and 8pm have longer total sleep, fewer night wakings, and better daytime behavior compared to those with later bedtimes.
If bedtime is taking more than 20 minutes, the schedule may need adjusting. Either the last wake window is too short (child not tired enough) or too long (child is overtired and wired).
Nap timing matters as much as nap length. A well-timed 45 minute nap can be more restorative than a poorly timed 2 hour nap. Watch your child's sleepy cues and track wake windows.
When transitioning between schedules (dropping a nap, adjusting wake windows), move in 15 minute increments over several days. Sudden changes lead to overtiredness and regression.
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.
Sample Daily Schedule
Nap timing matters as much as nap length. A well-timed 45 minute nap can be more restorative than a poorly timed 2 hour nap. Watch your child's sleepy cues and track wake windows.
When transitioning between schedules (dropping a nap, adjusting wake windows), move in 15 minute increments over several days. Sudden changes lead to overtiredness and regression.
Daycare schedules often conflict with ideal sleep timing. If your child's daycare nap is too early or too late, adjust bedtime to compensate. SleepCoach factors in daycare schedules automatically.
The 'right' schedule is the one where your child falls asleep within 10 to 15 minutes, sleeps well through the night with minimal wakings, and wakes up happy in the morning.
The right schedule prevents most sleep problems before they start. When your child sleeps at the right times, with the right amount of wake time in between, falling asleep becomes easier and night wakings decrease.
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.
Signs the Schedule Needs Adjusting
The 'right' schedule is the one where your child falls asleep within 10 to 15 minutes, sleeps well through the night with minimal wakings, and wakes up happy in the morning.
The right schedule prevents most sleep problems before they start. When your child sleeps at the right times, with the right amount of wake time in between, falling asleep becomes easier and night wakings decrease.
Wake windows are the amount of awake time between sleep periods. They increase as your child grows. Getting these right is the single most impactful thing you can do for your child's sleep.
Clock-based schedules work well for older toddlers and preschoolers who have predictable patterns. For babies under 12 months, following wake windows is usually more effective than watching the clock.
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.
How to Transition Between Schedules
Clock-based schedules work well for older toddlers and preschoolers who have predictable patterns. For babies under 12 months, following wake windows is usually more effective than watching the clock.
Total sleep in 24 hours decreases as your child ages. A newborn needs 14 to 17 hours. A 2 year old needs 11 to 14 hours. If your child is getting too much daytime sleep, nighttime will suffer.
Early bedtime is not just for convenience. Research shows that children who go to bed between 7 and 8pm have longer total sleep, fewer night wakings, and better daytime behavior compared to those with later bedtimes.
The goal is not to eliminate all night wakings or create a robot baby who sleeps on command. The goal is to give your child the skills and environment they need to sleep well, most of the time, so the whole family can function.
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.
Related Reading
- How Much Sleep Does a 3 Month Old Need?
- Sleep Schedule for Kindergartners
- Dropping Night Feeds Schedule
Frequently Asked Questions
What if my baby's schedule does not match the sample?
Sample schedules are starting points. Your child may need slightly more or less sleep. Watch their cues, track for a few days, and adjust in 15 minute increments.
How do I adjust the schedule for daycare?
Work with what daycare provides. If their nap time is different from your ideal, adjust bedtime to compensate. Cap naps if needed to protect bedtime.
Should I follow a clock-based schedule or wake windows?
For babies under 12 months, wake windows are generally more effective. For toddlers with predictable patterns, clock-based schedules work well. Many families use a hybrid approach.
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.
Plans start at $19.99/month, with a $149 one-time option and $39 stage packs for targeted help.