During a sleep regression, the biggest mistakes are the ones that accidentally teach new (and exhausting) sleep habits. Regressions are temporary, but what’s done in the middle of them can stick. Staying consistent and avoiding “quick fixes” helps your child return to their baseline sleep faster.
A regression already makes sleep feel unpredictable. If bedtime also keeps shifting—new steps, longer routines, different order—your child can become more alert and expect extra stimulation. Keep the routine simple, familiar, and repeatable, even if sleep is bumpy.
Extra rocking, feeding to sleep, or staying in the room until your child is fully asleep can become the new requirement at every wake-up. If you add support, choose the smallest amount that calms your child and you can realistically repeat at 2 a.m. and 4 a.m.
When night sleep falls apart, it’s tempting to cut naps to “build sleep pressure.” Often this backfires and creates overtiredness, which can increase night wakings and early mornings. Protect age-appropriate naps and aim for consistent wake windows.
A slightly earlier bedtime can help during a rough patch, but moving bedtime too early can lead to split nights or an even earlier wake-up. Adjust in small increments (15–30 minutes) and watch how your child responds over a few days.
Not every “regression” is purely developmental. Teething pain, illness, travel, a new daycare schedule, or room temperature changes can disrupt sleep. Address the basics first so you’re not fighting a problem that isn’t actually a regression.
For a deeper, practical breakdown of common pitfalls and what to do instead, visit What Not to Do During a Sleep Regression.
Many sleep regressions last about 2–6 weeks, though some resolve sooner. Consistent routines and avoiding new sleep crutches often shorten the disruption.
Leave a comment