Baby Won't Sleep Through the Night — What Really Helps (2026 Guide)
Your baby won't sleep through? Learn why it's normal, when babies start sleeping through, and which gentle methods really work.
Why your baby wakes at night — and why it's normal
Let's start with the most important message: Your baby is not broken. Night waking is not a flaw — it's a biological safety program.
Babies have shorter sleep cycles than adults (about 45-50 minutes vs. 90 minutes). At the end of each cycle, they briefly wake up — just like us. The difference: we can self-regulate back to sleep. Babies need to learn this first.
The science behind it: - Newborns have no established circadian rhythm (it develops from 6-8 weeks) - The stomach is tiny: a newborn needs feeding every 2-3 hours - REM sleep makes up 50% of baby sleep (vs. 20% in adults) — essential for brain development - Night waking protects against SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome)
So you're doing the right thing when you attend to your baby at night. You're responding to a real need.
When do babies sleep through? The honest answer
The answer nobody wants to hear: There's no fixed timeline. But there are guidelines.
| Age | Typical sleep behavior |
|---|---|
| 0-3 months | Waking every 2-3 hours, totally normal |
| 3-6 months | First longer stretches (4-6 hours), waking 1-3× |
| 6-9 months | Many manage 6-8 hours at a stretch |
| 9-12 months | About 50% sleep "through" (= 6+ hours) |
| 12-18 months | Most manage 10-12 hours with 0-1 interruption |
Important: "Sleeping through" in sleep research means 6 hours straight — not 8 or 12. If your baby sleeps from 8 PM to 2 AM, they've already "slept through."
A study from the Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics (2018) shows: At 6 months, only 38% of babies sleep 6 hours straight. At 12 months, it's 57%. So you're in good company.
Sleep regressions: The 4 critical phases
Things were going well — and suddenly your baby is waking hourly again? Welcome to sleep regression.
The 4 most common sleep regressions:
4-month regression (the hardest) - Your baby transitions from "newborn sleep" to "adult sleep cycles" - Lasts 2-6 weeks - Not a true regression but a PERMANENT change - Tip: Establish a consistent bedtime routine now
8-10 months - Coincides with crawling, pulling up, and separation anxiety - Your baby practices new skills at night in bed - Lasts 2-3 weeks
12 months - Transition from 2 naps to 1 - Baby tests boundaries - May coincide with first birthday
18 months - Separation anxiety peaks - Language explosion = overstimulated brain - Can be the most challenging
What helps with all of them: Keep the routine. Don't change too much. It passes.
5 gentle methods that really work
Here are 5 evidence-based approaches — WITHOUT "cry it out":
1. The bedtime routine (from 6 weeks) A predictable sequence signals the brain: sleep time. Example: Bath → Pajamas → Nursing/Bottle → Book → Song → Bed. Always the same. Always in this order. 20-30 minutes is enough.
2. Watch wake windows Overtired babies sleep WORSE. Optimal wake windows: - 0-3 months: 60-90 minutes - 3-6 months: 1.5-2.5 hours - 6-9 months: 2-3 hours - 9-12 months: 2.5-3.5 hours
3. "Pick Up, Put Down" (from 4 months) Baby is placed in bed drowsy. If they cry: pick up, calm, put down again. Repeat. Takes 30-60 minutes initially, improves quickly. No tears are ignored.
4. Chair Method (from 6 months) You sit next to the bed and soothe your baby with voice and touch. Every 2-3 days, move the chair a bit further away. After 1-2 weeks, you're at the door.
5. Sleep bridge (for all ages) When your baby wakes between two sleep cycles (after about 45 min), you're already there. Quiet "shhh" sounds, hand on chest, gentle rocking — BEFORE they fully wake up.
The most important rule: Choose ONE method and stick with it for at least 7-10 days. Switching methods confuses your baby.
When to see a pediatrician
Sometimes there's more behind sleep problems than just a phase. See a pediatrician when:
- ●Your baby seems extremely tired during the day despite adequate sleep opportunities
- ●They snore loudly and irregularly (may indicate enlarged tonsils)
- ●They have breathing pauses during sleep (sleep apnea)
- ●Sleep problems appear suddenly along with fever, restlessness, or food refusal (ear infection!)
- ●Your baby doesn't sleep at least 3 hours straight after 6 months
- ●You as a mother are so exhausted that you're afraid of dropping your baby or falling asleep standing up
That last point is serious. Your health matters too. Talk to your doctor — about YOU as well.
💡 Este artigo é informativo e não substitui aconselhamento médico. Para perguntas de saúde, entre em contato com sua parteira ou pediatra.
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