Baby guidance from newborn to 24 months
Explore sleep, feeding, milestones, activities, safety notes, product categories, and common parent questions for each age.
Best for
Parents who want the fastest route into age-specific sleep, feeding, milestone, and safety guidance without reading a long guide first.
Start with
The month you are in now, then compare the month before or after if routines suddenly feel different.
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Newborn
The newborn stage is often about recovery, learning cues, and building simple rhythms rather than strict schedules.
1 Month
Many one-month-olds are still feeding often, sleeping in short stretches, and helping parents learn what comfort and routine begin to look like.
2 Months
Many two-month-olds are smiling more, staying awake a little longer, and giving parents better clues about sleep and feeding patterns.
3 Months
This age often brings more social smiles, longer stretches of alertness, and early routine-building without needing rigid timing.
4 Months
Many four-month-olds are noticing more, moving more, and reacting more strongly to overtiredness, stimulation, and daily routine changes.
5 Months
Many five-month-olds are rolling, grabbing, and becoming more active in floor play while parents think ahead about sleep and mealtime changes.
6 Months
Many babies are rolling, reaching, and showing growing interest in mealtimes, while parents balance sleep, play, and readiness for solids.
7 Months
Many seven-month-olds are sitting more steadily, experimenting with solids, and showing stronger preferences during naps, play, and feeds.
8 Months
Many eight-month-olds are exploring textures, moving more independently, and making parents rethink babyproofing, naps, and mealtime pace.
9 Months
Many babies are crawling, pulling up, babbling, and deeply curious about everything within reach.
10 Months
Many ten-month-olds are crawling quickly, pulling up, babbling with purpose, and wanting a bigger role in every part of the day.
11 Months
Many eleven-month-olds are cruising, pointing, copying simple actions, and helping parents rethink meals, safety, and daily structure.
12 Months
Many one-year-olds are cruising, pointing, imitating, and shifting routines as family life starts to look a little different.
13 Months
Many thirteen-month-olds are moving more confidently, expressing bigger preferences, and making routines feel more toddler-like than before.
14 Months
Many fourteen-month-olds are moving constantly, understanding more than they can say, and making everyday routines feel more active and less passive.
15 Months
Many fifteen-month-olds are moving confidently, using more gestures or words, and needing simple routines that match their growing energy.
16 Months
Many sixteen-month-olds are climbing, copying, and pushing for more independence while still needing lots of routine support.
17 Months
Many seventeen-month-olds are climbing, pointing, and pushing back more while still relying on simple routines to keep the day workable.
18 Months
Many toddlers are walking well, climbing often, and understanding far more than they can say clearly.
19 Months
Many nineteen-month-olds are moving constantly, using more gestures or words, and helping parents rethink routines, naps, and mealtime expectations.
20 Months
Many twenty-month-olds are understanding a lot, moving constantly, and needing routines that support both independence and regulation.
21 Months
Many twenty-one-month-olds are running, climbing, and trying to communicate clearly even when the words do not always keep up yet.
22 Months
Many twenty-two-month-olds are pretending more, pushing back more, and needing routines that stay calm even when moods do not.
23 Months
Many twenty-three-month-olds are combining pretend play, stronger communication, and big opinions while parents keep routines sturdy ahead of age two.
24 Months
Two-year-olds often bring more words, more movement, more pretend play, and more confidence along with very real emotional ups and downs.
