Separation Anxiety
Handling Separation Anxiety in Your Baby
Separation anxiety in babies is a normal, healthy milestone appearing around 6–8 months and peaking by 10–18 months — a sign of secure attachment, not a disorder. Handle it with short, warm, predictable goodbyes, calm reunions, peek-a-boo practice and a comfort object, and stay calm yourself. Check with a clinician only if distress is extreme across all settings or paired with delays in babbling, eye contact or social smiling.
Those clinging arms and tears at the doorway aren't a problem to fix — they're a sign your baby has bonded beautifully with you.
In short
Separation anxiety in babies is a normal, healthy milestone — not a disorder. It usually appears around 6–8 months, peaks between 10–18 months, and eases as your baby learns that you always come back. Your job is to offer warm, predictable goodbyes and calm reunions, not to avoid all partings.Why it happens
Around the middle of the first year, your baby develops object permanence — the understanding that you still exist even when you leave the room. With that comes the worry that you might not return. This is a developmental leap, a sign of secure attachment, and it overlaps with the natural wariness of strangers. It tends to flare during big changes — a new carer, a house move, illness, or teething.What helps at home
- Practise tiny separations. Step into another room and call out cheerfully, then come back. Short games of peek-a-boo teach the powerful lesson that things — and people — come back.
- Keep goodbyes short, warm and consistent. A quick cuddle, a clear "bye-bye, back soon," then go. Long, anxious farewells make it harder for both of you.
- Never sneak away. Slipping out unseen can deepen the worry. A predictable goodbye builds trust.
- Offer a comfort object — a soft toy or a cloth that smells of you — for older babies.
- Build trust in carers by letting your baby warm up to a new person while you're still present.
- Mind your own calm. Babies read your face; a settled, confident tone reassures them faster than words.
When to check with someone
Most separation anxiety fades with gentle, consistent handling. Have a word with your paediatrician or a developmental team if the distress is extreme and unrelenting across all settings, if your baby seems generally hard to soothe or unusually withdrawn, or if you notice it alongside delays in babbling, eye contact or social smiling. A quick [developmental check](/) sets your mind at ease.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online article. If you'd like a gentle, structured look at how your baby is growing across communication, social and emotional milestones, our team can help. Explore the AbilityScore®, our warm child psychology support for families, and a [general developmental check](/).Trusted sources
Guidance here aligns with the American Academy of Pediatrics and its HealthyChildren resources on normal infant emotional development, and with the WHO Nurturing Care framework for responsive caregiving in the early years.Next step — if you'd simply like reassurance about your baby's emotional milestones, message the Pinnacle family team on WhatsApp at +91 91001 81181 for a friendly developmental check.
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
Reassuring if it fades with consistent, gentle goodbyes and your baby settles for a trusted carer. Worth a check if distress is extreme and unrelenting across every setting, your baby is generally hard to soothe or withdrawn, or you notice it alongside thin babbling, little eye contact or absent social smiling.
Try this at home
Play short peek-a-boo and 'I'm coming back' games each day — stepping out of view and returning cheerfully teaches your baby the one thing that calms the fear: people always come back.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · 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
At what age does separation anxiety start in babies?
It typically begins around 6–8 months, when your baby learns that you still exist when you leave the room, and peaks between about 10 and 18 months. It usually eases gradually as your baby builds trust that you always return.
Is it bad to leave my baby when they cry at separation?
No — short, predictable separations are healthy and actually help your baby learn that you come back. Keep goodbyes warm and brief, never sneak away, and offer a calm reunion. Avoiding all partings can make the worry harder to outgrow.
When should separation anxiety worry me?
Most fades with gentle, consistent handling. Speak to a clinician if the distress is extreme and unrelenting in every setting, your baby seems generally hard to soothe or withdrawn, or you notice it alongside delays in babbling, eye contact or social smiling.