Wake windows are the time between sleeps. Get them roughly right and most other sleep problems shrink. Get them very wrong and no sleep training method on earth will save you. Here is the chart I use, plus the trap nobody warns you about.
The chart
- 0 to 6 weeks: 45 to 60 minutes. Newborns physiologically cannot stay awake much longer. Feed, brief alert window, sleep.
- 6 to 12 weeks: 60 to 90 minutes. The alert window is more interactive but still short.
- 3 to 4 months: 90 to 120 minutes. Naps start to consolidate. Sleep architecture matures.
- 4 to 6 months: 2 to 2.5 hours. Most babies settle into 3 to 4 naps with similar wake windows.
- 6 to 9 months: 2.5 to 3 hours. Most babies are on 3 naps, transitioning to 2 around 8 months.
- 9 to 12 months: 3 to 3.5 hours. Two naps. Morning around 9am, afternoon around 1pm.
- 12 to 18 months: 3.5 to 4.5 hours. The 1-nap transition usually happens here. Most around 14 to 16 months.
- 18 months to 3 years: 5 to 6 hours. One midday nap.
- 3 years and up: Nap drops for most children. 12 hours of awake time before bedtime.
The trap nobody warns you about
The chart is a guide, not a stopwatch. The trap is treating it as gospel and ignoring your actual baby.
I have had parents tell me their 5-month-old "cannot sleep" at the 2-hour mark when in fact their baby's specific window is closer to 90 minutes. Or their 7-month-old still wants a 4th nap when the chart says 3. Or their 14-month-old who skipped the 1-nap transition entirely until 17 months.
The chart represents an average. About 70% of babies fall close to it. The other 30% are slightly shorter or slightly longer. Your baby's actual window is the average minus your baby's specific deviation, which you find by watching cues, not the clock.
The cues that matter
The reliable early tiredness cues are subtle and easy to miss.
- The "1000-yard stare." Eye contact softens. Your baby looks past you instead of at you.
- Reduced engagement with toys. A 15-second drop in interest when 30 seconds ago they were laser focused.
- Cool ears. Genuinely. Many babies show vasoconstriction in the ears before any other cue.
- A subtle pause-and-yawn pattern that is easy to miss if you are not watching.
By the time you see eye rubbing or proper crying, you have already missed the window by 5 to 10 minutes and you are putting an overtired baby down. Overtired babies fight sleep, take shorter naps, and wake earlier. The cycle compounds.
The 80/20 of wake windows
Use the chart for the first nap of the morning. From there, let the previous nap length adjust the next window. Short nap, shorten the next window by 15 minutes. Long nap, extend by 15. The chart is the starting point. Your baby is the data.
If you want the printable version, the free wake window cheat sheet covers ages 0 to 3 years on one page. Stick it on the fridge, not on the baby.
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