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Naps: The Unsung Hero of Solid Nights

Naps: The Unsung Hero of Solid Nights

Guiding you through the A to Zzzzz of daytime sleep

Daytime naps – they sound so simple (and appealing!) yet, for many parents, we know they can feel like one of the biggest mysteries of baby sleep. From short catnaps to unpredictable nap times and inventive ways to get them to drift off, it’s easy to wonder what’s normal and how to help your little one rest better.

That’s why our resident baby sleep experts, Gem and Eve of Calm & Bright, are here to take you through the A to Z of naps. Together, they’ll bust common myths, bring clarity to confusion, and share their expert advice for achieving longer, more predictable and restorative naps while explaining what to expect at every stage of your baby’s development.

Because, as Gem and Eve reveal, good daytime sleep is the foundation of peaceful nights…for both of you!

If you’ve ever found yourself pacing the living room at 3am, wondering why your baby is wide awake again, you’re not alone. Most parents assume that night sleep is all about what happens at night - the bedtime routine, the feed, the white noise, the blackout blinds.

But here’s the truth: a solid night’s sleep starts in the day. And the secret weapon? Naps.

Many families we work with at Calm & Bright arrive feeling like naps are a mystery: they’re too short, at the wrong times, and settle times can be longer than the nap itself.

The importance of naps - and how to tread the seemingly confusing riddle of making sure your baby is tired enough but not too tired, all contribute to parental overwhelm and confusion. We’re here to change that. Once we understand why naps matter and how to make them predictable, long and restorative, everything clicks into place.

We’ll break down what’s realistic at each stage, what to watch out for, and how to make naps (which, in case you didn’t know, stands for Necessary Adult Peace Sessions) work for you rather than against you.

Why Naps Matter So Much 

Just like night sleep, good day sleep isn’t just a bonus - it’s a biological necessity - for both you and your baby. During sleep, babies consolidate everything they’ve seen, heard, and felt. Their brains process memories, their bodies grow, and their nervous systems reset.

When naps are well-timed and restorative, babies handle the world better: they feed better, play better, and settle more calmly at night. When they’re overtired, though, it’s a different story - no matter how hard you try, they will resist, cry harder, and sleep becomes even more elusive.

Think of naps as the foundation of good night sleep. Without enough daytime rest under their belt, nighttime sleep will fall down, no matter how perfect the bedtime routine might be.

A mother lovingly cradles her baby in a carrier.

Solid Night Sleep Starts in the Day 

One of the biggest misconceptions about baby sleep is that keeping them awake longer during the day will ‘tire them out’ for the night. It sounds logical - but it’s actually the opposite.

When babies become overtired, their little bodies produce stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. These make them more wired, harder to settle, more likely to wake frequently through the night and more likely to start the day too early.

A baby who’s well-rested during the day finds it much easier to drift off peacefully at bedtime and stay asleep longer. That’s why we always say: good naps aren’t just for daytime sanity - alongside enabling self-settling, they’re the secret to a better night.

What's Possible: From 3 - 12 Months

Every baby is unique, but understanding roughly what’s possible at each stage can help you set realistic expectations and stop second-guessing yourself.

At 3 Months

  • Naps are still unpredictable - that’s okay and biologically appropriate.
  • Sleep cycles are around 20-45 minutes, so you’ll see lots of ‘cat naps’ and contact naps.  
  • Total daytime sleep might be 5–6 hours split across 4–5 naps.
  • You’re laying the groundwork: consistent wake times, gentle routines, and noticing early tired cues.

 

At 6 Months

  • Naps begin to organise themselves.
  • Most babies manage 3 naps a day: two long 1.5-2.5 hour naps, and a short late afternoon nap lasting 20-40 mins (this drops to 2 around 7 to 8 months)
  • Total daytime sleep: around 4–5 hours.  

 

At 9 Months

  • 2 naps a day.
  • The morning nap might shorten, and the lunchtime nap lengthen.
  • At this point, self-settling and a full night’s sleep are entirely possible - meaning that your baby is now capable of linking their sleep cycles without being rocked, fed, or held every time. This is enabled through gently teaching self-settling.

At 12 Months

  • Many babies are still on 2 naps a day; a few may start showing signs of dropping to 1.
  • Daytime sleep totals about 2.5-3 hours.
  • Nights become more settled as naps balance out - provided they’re well-timed and consistent.

 

Practical Tips for Better Naps

Let’s make this simple and doable - because you don’t need another thing to overthink. These are our nap foundations that can help transform your days…and nights!  

1. Use Nap Gaps, Not Set Times 

Many parents look up nap ‘routines’ online and try to make their baby fit into them. The problem? Babies aren’t robots - and every day is slightly different. Instead of chasing the clock, work with your baby’s natural “wake windows” - the amount of time they can comfortably be awake before becoming overtired:

  • At 1 month, it’s 45 minutes (between sleeps)
  • At 2 months, it’s an hour (15 minutes more than the month before)
  •  Every month thereafter, up to 12 months, add on 15 minutes to the gap. So, 2 hours at 6 months, 3.5 at 12 months.  

Watch your baby’s sleepy cues: slowing down, glazed eyes, losing interest in play, rubbing eyes, or turning away. When you spot these, start winding down for sleep before they tip into overtiredness.

This flexible approach helps naps land in that “sweet spot” - when your baby is tired enough to sleep but not so tired that they fight it.

 

2. Finding the Sweet Spot 

If naps are short or hard to achieve, timing is usually the missing piece. Aim for that perfect balance between enough awake time and not too much.

A good test:

  • If your baby is upset and finding it really hard to fall asleep, they may well be overtired (yawns are a sign of this too).
  • If they wriggle, chat, or are happy but awake in their sleep spot for more than 15 minutes, they may not be tired enough. Get them up and try again in half an hour.
  • If they wake after 30-40 minutes but seem refreshed, the nap gap may need to extend; but if they’re grumpy or seem tired before their nap gap is ‘up’, it may mean they were too tired when they went down.
     

Keep notes for a few days, and you’ll start to spot patterns - then you can gently adjust nap timing without stress.  

 

3. The Big Nap “No’s” (That Make Life Harder Without You Realising) 

Let’s clear up a few common nap traps we see all the time - and why avoiding them can make life much easier.

Feeding on Waking:

If you feed on waking, it means that hunger could well be shortening your baby’s nap. Feeding before a nap helps work with nature, not against it, and means that they will sleep longer with a full belly.

Waking Them Up:

It’s tempting to cut naps short so they’ll “sleep better tonight”, but this usually backfires. Letting your baby finish their sleep cycle means they wake restored, not cranky. An overtired baby cannot sleep well at night.  

Knackering Them Out:

The “tire them out” myth dies hard, but as we said earlier, overtiredness triggers stress hormones that prevent good sleep. Calm, consistent rhythms win every time. And as much day sleep as possible.

Doing Sleep for Them:

Rocking, feeding, or pushing the buggy can all be lovely bonding tools, and sometimes they’re essential for survival. But if they’re the only way your baby sleeps, you may find this restrictive, unsustainable and exhausting in the end. The goal isn’t to remove help - it’s to gradually and gently enable independence. Tiny steps, one nap at a time, can build confidence for both of you and help you take steps forward at your own pace.  

A Word on Real Life 

No baby naps perfectly every day. There will be teething days, noisy delivery days, skipped naps and car snoozes. There may be school runs and other commitments that mean sleep can’t always be at home, and that’s more than okay! The goal isn’t perfection - it’s balance.

You don’t have to control every nap to have great nights. You just need to tune in to your baby’s rhythms, support them gently, and allow their sleep to unfold naturally. Even one great nap a day is good.

If your baby only naps on you sometimes, that’s not failure; that’s necessity. It’s also a precious opportunity for your own rest and connection. If you use the pram or carrier for naps now and then or every day, that’s fine. If it works, it works!  

It’s all about doing what works most of the time, and what feels right for your family.

From Surviving to Thriving 

When naps begin to flow, everything changes. Babies who nap well are happier, calmer, and more predictable. Development and immunity is boosted. Parents feel more confident, less anxious, and finally get a moment to breathe, shower, or even have a hot cup of tea.

Sleep isn’t just about your baby — it’s about you, too. You matter. Your rest matters.

So, if naps have felt like a mystery until now, take a deep breath. You don’t need to overhaul everything overnight. Start with one nap a day. Watch, listen, adjust.

Day by day, you’ll start to see your baby finding their rhythm.

 

In a Nutshell 

  • Good nights begin with good naps.
  • Watch your baby, not the clock.
  • Avoid overtiredness - more sleep is almost always better.
  • Progress, not perfection, is the goal.

 

Connect With Us

Discover more about our gentle, love-led sleep support at Calm & Bright Sleep Support. You’ll also find more helpful articles by us on the Let’s Talk Sleep pages on the Mamas & Papas website and app.

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