Stop watching the clock and start watching your baby. This guide offers a flexible eat-play-sleep rhythm for your 6-month-old based on their natural "wake windows" to keep them happy and prevent overtired meltdowns.
First things first: there's no magic schedule. Your baby hasn't read the books. But they do like rhythm—a predictable flow that makes the world feel safe.
So think of this as a flexible guide, not a strict set of rules. It’s a place to start.
At six months, the most important thing to track is the "wake window," which is just the amount of time your baby can be awake between naps before they get grumpy. For most babies this age, it’s between 2 and 3 hours. The first window of the day is usually the shortest, and they stretch out as the day goes on.
Honestly, watching your baby is more important than watching the clock. Eye rubbing, yawning, fussing—those are your real timers. If you push them too far past that window, you get an overtired baby who decides sleep is their worst enemy.
This is just one way the day might look. Your baby's naps will be all over the place in length, and that's fine. The goal is roughly 3-4 hours of daytime sleep, usually over three naps. Some babies start moving to two naps around now, but three is more common.
Play is just about connecting and letting them explore.
Milk is still their main food. Solids at this age are mostly for practice—new tastes, new textures, and the whole new skill of moving food around in their mouth. Try offering solids once or twice a day. A lot of parents find it works well about an hour after a milk feed, so the baby isn't starving but is curious enough to try something new.
And don't worry if they hate it. It can take a dozen tries for them to accept a new food. Just keep offering it without pressure.
Some days, the naps will line up, the feedings will be smooth, and you'll feel like you've figured it all out.
Other days will be a complete mess.
And that's okay. The goal of a routine isn't to make your baby predictable. It's to give their day a familiar shape that helps them feel secure and helps you keep from going crazy. When a nap gets cut short, just breathe, adjust the next wake window, and move on. You're doing great.
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