Guide
Your baby was finally sleeping well — and then, seemingly overnight, everything fell apart. Welcome to a sleep regression. The reassuring truth is that regressions are almost always a sign of progress: a burst of brain or physical development temporarily disrupting sleep. They're temporary, they're normal, and how you respond determines whether they pass quickly or turn into a lasting habit.
| Age | What's usually behind it |
|---|---|
| ~4 months | A permanent change in sleep architecture (cycles mature) — the one true "regression" |
| ~8–10 months | Crawling/pulling up, separation anxiety, and often a nap transition |
| ~12 months | First steps and the 3-to-2 or 2-to-1 nap shift |
| ~18 months | Language explosion, molars, and a big push for independence |
| ~2 years | Nightmares begin, potty training, and a new sibling for many families |
Most regressions run two to six weeks. The 4-month one is a bit different: it reflects a permanent maturation of sleep cycles, so rather than "ending," sleep simply reorganizes around the new pattern. The others genuinely resolve once the underlying skill is mastered or the phase passes. According to the Sleep Foundation, symptoms rarely last more than a few weeks — and if disrupted sleep drags on for a month or more, that's the point to check in with your pediatrician rather than keep waiting it out.
The 4-month shift earns its own section because it's the only one that's permanent. In the newborn weeks, babies drop almost straight into deep sleep and spend long stretches there. Around 3 to 4 months, as the Sleep Foundation explains, a baby's brain and nervous system mature rapidly and sleep begins to consolidate into distinct cycles with lighter and deeper stages — much closer to adult sleep architecture. The catch is that between cycles, everyone briefly surfaces toward waking; adults roll over and don't remember it, but a baby who has only ever fallen asleep while being rocked or fed wakes fully and cries for the same help to get back down. That's why it feels like a regression when it's actually the foundation of mature, self-sustaining sleep.
Hold your routine steady. The biggest mistake — and the reason a two-week regression can become a two-month problem — is introducing new sleep associations to survive it: nursing or rocking all the way to sleep, bringing baby into your bed, or hovering until they drift off. Those become the new normal your child then can't sleep without. Offer extra comfort and patience, absolutely, but keep the actual fall-asleep conditions the same as before.
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~4 months: the permanent sleep-cycle change described above. The most useful response is letting your baby practice falling asleep in the crib drowsy but awake, so a normal mid-cycle wake-up doesn't require you.
~8–10 months: often a triple whammy — new mobility (crawling, pulling to stand), the arrival of separation anxiety, and sometimes teething. The Sleep Foundation notes bedtime agitation and more frequent night-waking are typical here. Plenty of daytime practice with new physical skills, plus calm and brief reassurance at night, help it pass.
~12 months: first steps and a nap transition can collide. Resist dropping to one nap too early just because nights are rough — a baby caught between too much and too little day sleep sleeps worse, not better.
~18 months: a language explosion, incoming molars, and a strong push for independence. Firm, loving limits and a rock-steady routine matter more than ever.
~2 years: nightmares can begin, potty training disrupts nights, and a new sibling arrives for many families. Comfort the fears without starting brand-new sleep crutches.
Not every rough patch is a true regression. Before riding one out, sanity-check the basics: a nap that's now too long or too late for your child's age can mimic a regression by leaving them under-tired at bedtime, and so can a bedtime that has quietly drifted earlier or later than their current sleep need. If the disruption lines up with a classic developmental window and the schedule still fits, it's likely a genuine regression. If the timing is off, the fix may simply be recalculating bedtime rather than waiting weeks for a phase to end.
Is a sleep regression a sign something is wrong? Almost never — it usually signals developmental progress. It's worth a pediatrician call only if it comes with fever, pain, breathing problems, or snoring, or if it simply won't pass after about a month.
Should I start sleep training during a regression? It's often easier to wait until the disruptive phase settles, then reinforce independent sleep. Mid-regression, prioritize consistency over launching a brand-new method.
My baby suddenly refuses naps too — same thing? Often yes. Regressions frequently hit day sleep as well, and a nap transition can be tangled up in the 8–12 month and 18-month periods especially.
Do regressions happen at exactly 4, 8, and 18 months? No — the ages are approximate. Development doesn't follow a calendar, so a "4-month" regression can appear anywhere from about 3 to 5 months, and some babies pass through a given window with barely a ripple.
Can I prevent regressions? Not really — they're built into normal development. But strong foundations (a consistent routine and the ability to fall asleep independently) reliably make them shorter and less intense when they do hit.