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3-to-6-month-old

Screen time for a 3-to-6-month-old: how much is safe?

For a 3-to-6-month-old, no recreational screen time is recommended — WHO and AAP advise no screen media for babies this young, apart from live video calls with family. Babies this age learn from faces, voices and touch, not screens. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

Screen time for a 3-to-6-month-old: how much is safe?
How Much Screen Time Is Safe for a 3-6 Month Old? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

At this age, the most nourishing screen is your face — close, warm and full of expression.

In short

For a baby aged 3 to 6 months, the safest amount of recreational screen time is none at all. Leading guidance from the World Health Organization and the American Academy of Pediatrics is clear that screens are not recommended for babies under 18–24 months, apart from live video-calls with loving family. At this stage your baby learns almost everything from faces, voices, touch and movement — things a screen simply cannot give back. So there is no "safe small amount" to aim for; the goal is gentle, screen-free connection.

Why screens don't help babies this young

Between 3 and 6 months your baby's brain is busy wiring itself through two-way exchanges — you smile, they coo back; you talk, they watch your mouth and reach out. This back-and-forth, sometimes called "serve and return", is how language, attention and bonding grow. A screen cannot respond to your baby, so even baby-aimed videos do not teach the way real interaction does.

There is one warm exception: live video calls with grandparents or a travelling parent are fine in small doses, because a real person is responding in real time.

A few gentle pointers:

  • Keep mealtimes and the cot screen-free, so feeding and sleep stay calm and connected.
  • Try not to use a screen as a soother — babies this age settle best with your voice, rocking and touch.
  • Watch your own screen habits too; babies follow your gaze, and time on a phone is time away from those serve-and-return moments.

When to seek a check

Screen time itself is not a developmental concern at this age — but if by around 4–6 months your baby rarely makes eye contact, doesn't smile back at you, doesn't turn towards your voice or seems unusually floppy or stiff, a gentle developmental check is worthwhile. These are about how your baby connects, not about screens.

The Pinnacle way

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. If you'd ever like reassurance about how your baby is connecting and growing, our team can help. Explore [developmental support for your family](/), learn how an AbilityScore® is gently assessed, or read about early communication and play.

Trusted sources

World Health Organization guidance on physical activity, sedentary behaviour and screen time for children under 5; American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org guidance recommending no screen media for babies under 18–24 months apart from video-chatting.

Next step — Want reassurance that your baby is thriving? Book a gentle developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.

What to watch

Screens aren't the worry at this age — but watch whether your baby makes eye contact, smiles back, turns towards your voice and reaches out. By 4–6 months these connecting cues matter more than any screen rule.

Try this at home

Swap screen time for face time: hold your baby close, talk and pause for their coos, and let them watch your mouth move — this serve-and-return play is the richest learning there is.

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

Is any screen time okay for a 3-to-6-month-old?

Recreational screens are not recommended at all for babies this young. The one gentle exception is live video calls with family, because a real person is responding to your baby in real time.

Will a little screen time harm my baby?

An occasional moment won't cause harm, so there's no need to feel guilty. The point is that screens don't teach babies this young — your face, voice and touch do far more for their growing brain, so it's best to keep screens minimal.

Are video calls with grandparents safe?

Yes. Short live video chats are fine, because they involve real back-and-forth with a loving person. That's very different from passive videos, which babies can't learn from.

What should my baby do instead of watching a screen?

Talking and singing to your baby, plenty of tummy time, gentle play, and responding when they coo or smile are all far richer learning than any screen — and they strengthen your bond.

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