Guide
Of all the levers parents have over children's sleep, a consistent bedtime routine is the most powerful and the most underused. Research consistently links a regular wind-down routine to falling asleep faster, waking less overnight, and better mood the next day. The magic isn't in any single step — it's in doing the same calming sequence, in the same order, at roughly the same time, every night. Predictability is what signals a child's body to power down.
A consistent bedtime routine is one of the few sleep strategies with solid research behind it. Pediatric sleep specialists describe a regular, calming pre-bed sequence as an empirically supported way to help young children fall asleep faster and wake less overnight, and the American Academy of Pediatrics lists a predictable routine as a cornerstone of healthy sleep at every age. National data point the same way: in CDC analysis, children who had a regular bedtime were more likely to actually get the sleep their age needs. The routine does two jobs at once — physically winding the body down, and teaching the brain that sleep reliably follows this exact set of cues.
A good routine is short (about 20–45 minutes), calm, and consistent. A classic three-to-four step version works for almost any age:
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If you want the shortest possible starting point, the AAP promotes a three-word version — brush, book, bed — through its early-literacy and sleep guidance. It's deliberately minimal so it's easy to keep identical every night and in every setting: brush teeth, read a bedtime story book (or two), lights out. From that spine you can add small touches — a bath before "brush" for younger children, a few minutes of quiet talk after "book" for older ones — without losing the core order. The point isn't the specific steps; it's that the sequence never changes, so your child always knows exactly what comes next.
Two environmental factors can quietly sabotage even a perfect routine. The first is light: the AAP recommends turning off all screens at least 60 minutes before bed and keeping TVs, tablets, and phones out of the bedroom, because screen light suppresses melatonin — the hormone that signals sleep — while games and videos raise alertness and heart rate. Dimming the household lights as the routine begins helps melatonin rise on schedule.
The second is the temptation to reach for a melatonin supplement. The AAP's position is cautious: melatonin may have a limited, short-term role for some children under a doctor's guidance, but it is not a substitute for an inconsistent routine and should not be started without talking to your pediatrician. A steady wind-down does the same job — safely, and for the long term.
Babies (4–11 months): keep it very short and repetitive — feed, brief cuddle, into the crib drowsy but awake so they learn to settle themselves. Toddlers (1–3): expect some testing and stalling; a visual routine chart and firm, loving consistency work better than negotiation. Preschool and school age: give a little agency (which pajamas, which book) inside a fixed structure, and hold a consistent bedtime even on weekends — a drifting weekend schedule is a common cause of Monday-morning meltdowns.
Even a good routine gets tested. A few common patterns and fixes:
How long should the routine be? About 20–45 minutes for most children — long enough to genuinely calm down, short enough to repeat identically every night.
When should we start a routine? You can begin a simple, predictable wind-down in the first few months. It doesn't need to be elaborate — even a short feed, a cuddle, and a consistent "into the crib drowsy but awake" counts.
What if two parents do bedtime differently? Agree on the same order and the same limits. Children adapt easily to who does bedtime, but not to different rules each night.