Starting Solids: When, Which Foods & Weekly Plan (2026)
When to start solids? Readiness signs, weekly plan for the first weeks, BLW vs. purée, and the best foods to start with.
Readiness signs: These 4 signs must be present
The WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding/formula until 6 months. Solids can be introduced from 5 months at the earliest — but ONLY if all 4 signs are present:
1. Head control — Your baby can hold their head up steadily and independently
2. Upright sitting — They can sit upright with minimal support (doesn't need to sit independently)
3. Tongue thrust reflex gone — When you hold a small spoon to their lips, they no longer automatically push food out with their tongue
4. Interest in food — They reach for your food, watch you eat, make chewing movements
NOT signs of readiness: - "They watch my food" (all babies observe movement) - "They wake more at night" (this has many causes) - "They're 4 months old" (age alone isn't enough) - "Grandma says they need porridge now" (Grandma means well, but recommendations have changed)
The weaning plan: week by week
Week 1-2: Pure vegetable Start with one vegetable per week. Ideal starters: pumpkin, parsnip, carrot, or zucchini. 2-3 teaspoons at lunch, then nurse/bottle as normal.
Week 3-4: Vegetable + potato Add potato as a filling side. Try new vegetables: sweet potato, broccoli, cauliflower.
Week 5-6: Vegetable-potato-meat Add lean meat (beef, chicken, turkey) — important for iron and zinc! 2-3× per week meat, 1× fish, rest vegetarian.
Week 7-8: Second meal (cereal-fruit) Afternoon: oat or millet flakes with fruit purée (apple, pear, banana). Continue nursing/bottle for remaining meals.
From month 3 of solids: Third meal (milk-cereal) Evening: whole milk cereal porridge.
| Week | Meal | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1-2 | Lunch: Pure vegetable | 3-5 tsp pumpkin purée |
| 3-4 | Lunch: Vegetable + potato | Carrot-potato purée |
| 5-6 | Lunch: Veg-potato-meat | Zucchini-potato-beef |
| 7-8 | + Afternoon: Cereal-fruit | Oat-apple porridge |
| 9+ | + Evening: Milk-cereal | Semolina with pear |
BLW vs. purée — which is better?
The honest answer: Both work. Science shows no significant differences in nutrient intake or motor development.
Purée (traditional) - Parents have more control over quantity - Easier for parents who fear choking - Nutrient-rich through targeted composition - Downside: Less exploration, child learns textures later
Baby Led Weaning (BLW) - Baby eats "normal" food in pieces from the start - Promotes fine motor skills and self-regulation - Less mealtime stress — baby decides what and how much - Downside: More mess, gagging (not choking!) is normal
My tip: Mixed approach Start with purée and offer finger food alongside. Your baby gets nutrients from purée AND the sensory experience of BLW.
Choking vs. gagging: Gagging is NORMAL and a protective reflex. Your baby coughs, makes sounds, turns red. This is GOOD — they're learning. True choking is silent — the baby turns blue and can't breathe. Learn the difference. A baby first aid course is ESSENTIAL.
💡 Este artículo es informativo y no sustituye el consejo médico. Para preguntas de salud, contacta a tu matrona o pediatra.
Preguntas Frecuentes
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