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Last updated on May 26th, 2024

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Kim West, MSW, Mom of 2, creator of The Sleep Lady Shuffle

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Baby Sleep Schedule — Your Nine to Twelve-Month-Old

Nine to twelve-month-old babies are reaching developmental milestones at an amazing rate. These babies are more mobile, crawling and pulling themselves up in their cribs, and can pop up each time you put them down at bedtime. Some walk by their first birthday—a major developmental milestone that can temporarily disrupt sleep. Increased activity can tire them out, so you have to pay very close attention to their sleep window, when they are most ready and able to fall asleep. Some can even fight sleep, and hide their sleep cues making it easy to miss that ideal sleep window. Getting your baby sleep schedule on track can be hard because this age group has so many challenges such as:

  • Separation anxiety
  • Standing, crawling, mobility
  • Feeding challenges
  • Difficulties with consistency

How Much Sleep Do 9 to 12-month-olds Need?

Babies at this age need an average of eleven hours of sleep at night and three during the day. At nine months, babies should nap for about an hour and a half in the morning and about one and a half to two hours in the afternoon. Most have given up that brief, third late afternoon nap if they are sleeping well at night and taking restorative naps. By twelve months, the morning nap is about an hour, and the afternoon nap is about an hour and a half.

Want to know more about baby sleep schedules?
Read: Sample Schedules: Sleep and Naps From 6 Months to Preschool

Separation Anxiety

Babies have peaks of separation anxiety at about nine months, when they are crawling and sitting, and at twelve months, when they are standing, walking, and climbing. Those physical leaps often make them wake up more at night, at least temporarily, and the accompanying cognitive leaps make them more aware of strangers, places, and change.

Sleep regressions happen at many developmental stages. Want to read more?
Read: The 9 Month Sleep Regression — When Your Baby Stops Sleeping

Standing Up can Interfere with your Baby Sleep Schedule

Most babies can now pull themselves up and stand—which creates some new twists at bedtime or naptime when you put them down in the crib and they can pop back up again. I usually tell parents not to intervene (if the baby knows how to get down), or to put the baby down once, but only once. While you are sitting next to the crib, pat the mattress and encourage your baby to lie down. If you sit, he will be more likely to sit down to be on your level.

Babies do tend to learn how to get up before they can get back down, so let her practice during the day. Let her stand up and try to get down holding on to the coffee table—after you baby proof the corners and put some pillows around if needed. Games like ring-around-the-rosy are also good for developing up-and down motions. But do the practicing games out of the crib, during awake time, not at naps or bedtime.

Feeding is Part of Your Baby Sleep Schedule

Introduce a cup before the first birthday, even if you are still nursing, and even if you plan on nursing for some time to come. As babies get older, they can get emotionally attached to the bottle or breast. It basically becomes their primary and sometimes only way to soothe themselves, and that can contribute to an ingrained habit of waking up at night in search of it.

It’s a good idea to introduce your baby to a cup by 9 months old, so by the time she’s 12 months old, she’ll be weaned off the bottle. Around 15 months, many babies become attached to objects like bottles and pacifiers, so if your child is still drinking from a bottle after 15 months old—especially before going to sleep—it’s going to be especially tough to wean her off of it.

It Might be Time to Night Wean

Check with your pediatrician. Healthy children from nine to twelve months on a normal growth curve can almost always go eleven to twelve hours at night without a feeding. If your child is still waking to eat frequently, you probably have to either adjust his body clock or change his habits.

Try to nurse or bottle feed at set times or upon wake up, and use the cup at set times, giving him water, expressed breast milk, milk, soy milk, formula, diluted juice, whatever your doctor recommends. Moms and babies  often find that they both like nursing in the morning and evening and using the cup during the day, especially with solids at mealtimes.

Don’t let him fall asleep on the breast or with the bottle, and don’t let him be dependent on nursing to fall asleep or stay asleep, or you’ll be up nursing him back to sleep all night for months to come.
If you wean during this period, that can also alter the rhythms of bedtime.

Time to night wean?
Read: How to End Night Feedings After Six Months Old

toddler schedule
Check with your pediatrician: healthy children from nine to twelve months on a normal growth curve can almost always go eleven to twelve hours at night without a feeding. If your child is still waking to eat frequently, you probably have to either adjust his body clock or change his habits.

Sample Baby Sleep Schedule for 9 Months

7:00–7:30 a.m. Wake-up. Nurse/bottle/cup and breakfast.
9:00–9:30 a.m. Start the morning nap. If your child is sleeping eleven to twelve hours uninterrupted at night, he might be able to stay awake until 10:00 a.m. That’s three hours after wake-up. Some children need a small morning snack after the nap.
12:00–12:30 p.m. Lunch with nurse/bottle/cup.
1:00–2:00 p.m. Start the afternoon nap. Snack upon awakening.
5:00–6:00 p.m. Dinner with nurse/bottle/cup.
7:00–7:30 p.m. Bedtime with nurse/bottle (changing to a cup as she gets closer to 12 months old).

Need more information for your baby sleep schedule?
Read: Sample Schedules: Sleep and Naps From 6 Months to Preschool

Consistency and Predictability

Young children do need consistency and predictability. Your baby sleep schedule will obviously vary somewhat from one child to the next, and one family to the next. A baby who wakes up at 6:30 a.m. will have a different timetable than one who gets up at 7:30. But this is a good model, so try not to deviate too much. Don’t let the baby stay up too late at night, no matter how much fun he seems to be having.

If you haven’t already helped your baby learn to fall asleep on her own, consider some sleep training. You can find information in our books and online courses. If you need more help, visit the website to learn about our Certified Gentle Sleep Coaches, both online or in-person, all over the world.

Get the sleep help your family need with one-on-one help with a certified, trained Gentle Sleep Coach.

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Author: Kim West, MSW, Mom of 2, creator of The Sleep Lady Shuffle

My name is Kim West, and I’m the mother of two beautiful girls, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker who has been a practicing child and family therapist for more than 21 years, and the creator of the original gentle, proven method to get a good night’s sleep for you and your child. My sleep journey began when I started experimenting with gently shaping my daughter’s sleep by not following the conventional wisdom at the time. After having success (and then more success with my second daughter!), I began helping family and friends and my step-by-step method spread like wildfire, exactly like an excellent night of sleep for a tired parent should!