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9-to-12-month-old

How much screen time is safe for a 9-to-12-month-old?

For a 9-to-12-month-old, the safest amount of screen time is essentially none, apart from live video calls with family. WHO and AAP advise avoiding screens before 18 months because babies learn best from face-to-face interaction and hands-on play. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

How much screen time is safe for a 9-to-12-month-old?
How Much Screen Time Is Safe at 9-12 Months? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Those first wobbly months are made for cuddles, babble and reaching for real things — not screens.

In short

For a 9-to-12-month-old, the safest amount of screen time is none — apart from live video calls with loved ones, which are a lovely exception. Leading guidance from the World Health Organization and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends avoiding screens for babies under 18 months, because at this age your little one learns best from your face, your voice and hands-on play. There is nothing to feel guilty about — gentle changes from today make all the difference.

Why screens aren't for babies yet

In the 9–12 month window your baby's brain is wiring up through back-and-forth moments — you point, they look; you name a toy, they babble back. Screens can't offer this two-way response, and very young babies don't yet transfer what they see on a flat screen to the real world.
  • Video chat is fine and welcome — a call with grandparents is social and interactive, so it doesn't count as passive screen time.
  • Background TV adds up — a television on in the room can pull attention away from play and reduce the words your baby hears, so switch it off when no one is watching.
  • Swap a screen for a sense — peek-a-boo, stacking cups, board books, splashing at bath time and crawling games give the rich input a screen cannot.

A gentle, realistic note

Life with a baby is busy, and the occasional few minutes while you cook or shower will not harm your child. The goal is simply that screens stay the rare exception, not the daily habit — and that most of your baby's waking time is spent moving, exploring and connecting with you.

The Pinnacle way

This is general guidance, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care. If you ever feel your baby isn't babbling, making eye contact or responding to your voice as you'd expect, a friendly [developmental check](/) helps you understand what's typical and what's worth watching. Learn how our structured AbilityScore® assessment works, and how speech therapy supports early communication when it's needed.

Trusted sources

World Health Organization guidance on physical activity, sedentary behaviour and sleep for under-fives (sedentary screen time not recommended below age 2). American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org advice to avoid screens other than video chat before 18 months.

Next step — Want reassurance that your baby is on track? [Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician](/).

What to watch

Watch for limited babbling, little eye contact, not turning to your voice or not reaching for nearby people and toys — and for screens slipping into a daily habit rather than a rare exception.

Try this at home

Keep one or two favourite open-ended toys within reach and narrate your day aloud — naming the spoon, the bath, the dog — so your baby gets the rich, responsive language a screen can never give.

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 my 9-month-old?

The one welcome exception is live video calls with family, which are social and interactive. Other screens — TV, tablets, phones — are best avoided before 18 months, though an occasional few minutes while you manage a task will not harm your baby.

Why is screen time discouraged for babies under one?

At this age your baby's brain learns through back-and-forth interaction — your face, voice and hands-on play. Screens can't respond, and very young babies don't yet transfer what they see on screen to the real world, so screen time displaces the experiences they learn most from.

Does background TV count?

Yes, in a sense — a television on in the room can reduce the words your baby hears and pull attention from play, even if they're not watching directly. Switching it off when no one is using it helps your baby focus on you and their surroundings.

What should my baby do instead of screen time?

Floor play, tummy time, peek-a-boo, stacking and posting toys, board books and lots of talking and singing with you. These give the movement, language and social connection that build your baby's brain in this important window.

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