Guide

Nap Transitions: When Kids Drop Naps

By the Rytell Family-Health Team · Updated July 2026

Nap transitions are some of the trickiest weeks of early parenting. Your child is caught between needing two naps and only cooperating for one, and the result is short naps, early wake-ups, or a cranky, overtired evening. The key is recognizing that transitions are driven by development, not the calendar — the ages below are typical, but your child's readiness signs matter more than their birthday.

The usual timeline

TransitionTypical ageEnds at
4–5 naps → 3 naps~3–4 months
3 naps → 2 naps~6–9 months
2 naps → 1 nap~13–18 months
1 nap → no nap~3–5 yearsquiet time replaces it

How many kids still nap, by age

Because napping is developmental, it fades at very different ages from one child to the next. Figures compiled by the Sleep Foundation give a useful sense of the spread once children pass toddlerhood:

AgeRoughly how many still nap
3 yearsAlmost all still nap at least once a day
4 yearsAbout 60%
5 yearsFewer than 30%
6 yearsFewer than 10%
7 yearsNearly all have stopped

The move from two naps to one usually lands between 15 and 24 months, with most children settling on a single afternoon nap by around 18 months. A 2-year-old's nap typically runs 1–3 hours and still contributes meaningfully to their daily total.

Whatever the nap count, the number that matters most is the 24-hour total. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends 11–14 hours a day (naps included) for 1–2 year-olds and 10–13 hours for 3–5 year-olds. So as daytime sleep shrinks, nighttime sleep should lengthen to compensate — which usually means an earlier bedtime.

Signs your child is ready to drop a nap

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🪟 On early-morning wake-ups: if your child is surfacing at dawn with too little night sleep, first light through the window is often part of it — blackout curtains can help buy back the last stretch of morning sleep while a transition settles.

Think in "wake windows," not just the clock

A wake window is the stretch of awake time a child can comfortably handle before needing sleep again, and it lengthens as they grow. Transitions happen when the old nap schedule no longer fits the new, longer window — the child simply isn't tired enough at the old nap time, so that nap turns short or gets refused, which then knocks the next sleep out of place. Reading the window (how long since the last sleep, plus early tired signs like eye-rubbing or zoning out) is more reliable than rigidly holding a fixed nap clock during a transition.

How to ease the transition

Transitions are rarely clean. During the 2-to-1 shift especially, some days your child needs two naps and some days one — that's normal for a few weeks. A few tactics smooth it out:

The messy in-between weeks

Transitions are rarely clean, and the 2-to-1 shift is the messiest of all. For a few weeks it's completely normal for your child to genuinely need two naps some days and only one on others — the Sleep Foundation's guidance is to keep following your child's cues day by day rather than forcing the new schedule overnight. A practical approach: offer one nap on most days, keep an early "rescue" bedtime ready, and don't be afraid to reinstate a short second nap on a day they clearly can't make it to the evening.

Quiet time when naps end for good

When a child gives up the nap entirely — often between 3 and 5 years — many parents replace it with quiet time. The Sleep Foundation describes this as a set period in a specific place where the child can either doze or play calmly with low-stimulation activities like books, puzzles, or coloring. Skip screens and car rides, since both tend to trigger accidental sleep at the wrong time. A toddler "ok-to-wake" clock that changes color can mark when quiet time is over, so a non-napping child knows when it's fine to come out. Quiet time protects a midday recharge — and the adult's sanity — whether or not any actual sleeping happens, and it eases the shift for children who still crash on busier days.

Quick answers

Should I drop the morning nap or the afternoon nap first? When moving to one nap, keep the afternoon nap. Gradually push the morning nap later in 15–30 minute steps until it merges into a single early-afternoon nap that anchors the day.

My child's bedtime got harder after dropping a nap — why? Overtiredness. Counter-intuitively, an overtired child fights sleep, so an earlier bedtime for a week or two usually smooths both bedtime and night sleep during a transition.

Is it bad to keep offering a nap they sometimes refuse? No — offering the opportunity is fine. It's persistent, days-in-a-row refusal (not the occasional skip) that signals real readiness to drop it.

Won't an earlier bedtime just cause early-morning waking? Usually the opposite. Early waking is more often a sign of overtiredness or slightly too much daytime sleep than of too-early nights, so an earlier bedtime during a transition tends to lengthen morning sleep rather than cut it short.

📌 When you drop a nap, your child's ideal bedtime usually gets earlier for a while. Re-run the numbers in the bedtime calculator after each transition. If your child seems persistently overtired or the transition is causing real distress, your pediatrician can help.
→ Recalculate bedtime after a nap change