Calm Down Corner
Building a Calm Down Corner With Your Child at Home
A Calm Down Corner is a cosy, never-punishment space where your child learns to settle big feelings. Build it together, fill it with soft and sensory soothers, practise the calming steps when your child is happy, and offer it gently — staying nearby to co-regulate — when emotions run high.
A Calm Down Corner isn't a naughty step — it's a cosy, safe spot where big feelings get smaller, together.
In short
A Calm Down Corner is a small, comforting space in your home where your child can go — willingly, never as punishment — to settle strong emotions like anger, frustration or overwhelm. You build it together, fill it with soothing tools, and practise using it when your child is calm so it feels familiar when feelings run high. Done warmly and consistently, it teaches your child that big feelings are okay and that they have ways to handle them.How to set it up at home
Choose the spot together- Pick a quiet, low-traffic corner — a beanbag, a tent, cushions or a soft rug all work.
- Let your child help decorate and name it ("Cosy Corner", "Calm Cave"). Ownership makes it inviting.
- Keep it small and enclosed-feeling; cosy spaces feel safe.
Fill it with calming tools
- Soft items: a favourite cushion, blanket or stuffed toy.
- Sensory soothers: a squishy ball, fidget, glitter jar or a soft fabric to touch.
- A simple feelings chart or photos showing happy, sad, angry, calm — to help your child name what they feel.
- A picture card of calming steps: "smell the flower, blow the candle" (slow breaths), squeeze and release, count to five.
Practise when calm, not only in a storm
- Visit the corner together during a happy moment. Model it: "I'm feeling a bit cross, I'll take three big breaths in my calm corner."
- Try the breathing and squeezing games as play, so the skills are already learned before they're needed.
Use it gently in the moment
- Offer, never order: "Would your calm corner help right now?" Going there should feel like a choice.
- Stay nearby. Young children often need you co-regulating beside them, not sent away alone.
- When calm returns, reconnect with a hug and, only later, gently talk about what happened.
When to seek extra support
A Calm Down Corner helps most children, but if meltdowns are very frequent, very intense, last a long time, or your child struggles to settle even with support across home and other settings, it's worth a developmental check. Difficulty regulating emotions can sometimes travel alongside speech, sensory or attention differences — and early support makes a real difference.The Pinnacle way
At Pinnacle Blooms Network, our therapists weave emotional-regulation strategies like the Calm Down Corner into everyday routines, often alongside occupational therapy for children who need extra sensory and self-regulation support. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — a home Calm Down Corner is a supportive everyday tool, not a diagnostic step.Trusted sources
Guidance here is consistent with the American Academy of Pediatrics' parenting resources on emotional regulation and positive discipline (healthychildren.org) and CDC guidance on supporting young children's social-emotional development.Next step — to understand your child's emotional and self-regulation strengths, book a clinician-led assessment with Pinnacle Blooms Network, or message our team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch how quickly your child settles with support. If meltdowns are very frequent, very intense, long-lasting, or hard to soothe across home and other settings, consider a developmental check — emotional dysregulation can travel with speech, sensory or attention needs.
Try this at home
Practise the calm corner when your child is happy, not only mid-meltdown — rehearse 'smell the flower, blow the candle' breathing as a fun game so the skill is ready when feelings get big.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is a Calm Down Corner the same as a time-out or naughty step?
No. A time-out is used to remove a child after misbehaviour, whereas a Calm Down Corner is a welcoming, comforting space your child chooses to help settle big feelings. It should never feel like punishment — you offer it, and you often stay close to help your child calm down together.
What age can I start a Calm Down Corner?
You can begin gently from around age two, keeping it simple and staying right beside your child to co-regulate. As children grow towards school age, they can use it more independently. Younger children almost always need your calm presence rather than being sent there alone.
What should I put in a Calm Down Corner?
Soft cushions or a blanket, a favourite toy, a sensory soother like a squishy ball or glitter jar, a simple feelings chart, and a picture card showing calming steps such as slow breathing or squeezing and releasing. Keep it cosy and uncluttered.
My child refuses to use the corner when upset. What should I do?
That's common. Practise it during calm, happy moments first so it feels familiar, and model using it yourself. Always offer it as a choice rather than ordering your child there. If big meltdowns persist and are hard to soothe, a developmental check can help.