Co-Sleeping Dependence
Should I worry about co-sleeping in a 6-year-old?
Co-sleeping with a healthy 6-year-old is normal, culturally rooted and not a disorder — it is not, on its own, a cause for worry. The bed itself is not the issue; seek a gentle check only if bedtime resistance travels with intense daily separation anxiety, frequent night terrors, snoring or breathing pauses in sleep, or daytime mood and attention problems. Moving towards independent sleep, if you wish, works best slowly and warmly.
A six-year-old who still wants to fall asleep beside you isn't broken, and neither is your parenting — closeness at bedtime is a very ordinary human need.
In short
No — co-sleeping with a 6-year-old, or a strong preference for it, is not a disorder and is not, on its own, a cause for worry. Across many Indian and global families it is a normal, culturally rooted choice, and bed-sharing in a healthy 6-year-old carries none of the safety risks it does in infancy. The time to seek a gentle developmental check is not because of where your child sleeps, but if bedtime resistance comes with intense daytime anxiety, persistent night terrors, breathing pauses in sleep, or difficulty separating from you in every other setting too.Making sense of it at six
"Co-sleeping dependence" is not a recognised diagnosis — it's a description of a habit, and habits are very changeable at this age. Wanting a parent nearby to fall asleep is a sign of secure attachment, not weakness. Whether you choose to keep co-sleeping or to encourage independent sleep is entirely a family decision, shaped by your home, culture and what works for everyone's rest.If you do wish to move towards independent sleep, slow and warm works far better than sudden change:
- A predictable wind-down — the same calm sequence each night (bath, story, dim lights) tells the body sleep is coming.
- Gradual distance — sitting on the bed, then a chair nearby, then by the door over a few weeks, rather than all at once.
- A comfort anchor — a soft toy, a shared blanket, or a night-light that belongs to your child.
- Daytime warmth banked up — unhurried connection in the day makes night-time separation feel safer.
This is parenting craft, not therapy — there's no rush, and there's no single "right" age to stop.
When a check is wise
Look beyond bedtime. A gentle developmental or paediatric review is sensible if you also notice intense, daily separation anxiety (panic at school drop-off, refusing to be in any room alone), frequent night terrors or sleepwalking, loud snoring or pauses in breathing during sleep, or sleep so disrupted that daytime mood, attention or learning suffer. These point to specific, treatable things — and none of them are caused by co-sleeping itself.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online checklist. If bedtime worry travels with daytime anxiety or separation difficulty, our occupational therapy and counselling teams can help build calm, confident routines around your child's natural rhythms. You can always begin with a [calm developmental conversation](/) to put your mind at ease.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on healthy sleep routines and separation in school-age children; CDC (cdc.gov) resources on children's sleep needs; WHO nurturing-care framework on responsive caregiving. These confirm that bed-sharing in a healthy older child is a family choice, not a clinical concern.Next step — Trust your instinct and your culture. If bedtime worry comes with daytime anxiety, book a developmental conversation with a Pinnacle clinician for warm, clear reassurance.
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
Co-sleeping itself is not a worry. Seek a gentle check if your child also shows intense daily separation anxiety (panic away from you in every setting), frequent night terrors or sleepwalking, loud snoring or breathing pauses in sleep, or sleep so disrupted that daytime mood, attention or learning suffer.
Try this at home
If you'd like to ease towards independent sleep, change one small thing at a time — sit on the bed for a week, then on a chair nearby, then by the door — and keep the same calm bedtime routine each night. Slow and warm beats sudden and tearful.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
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 co-sleeping with a 6-year-old harmful?
No. In a healthy older child, bed-sharing carries none of the safety risks it does in infancy, and it is a normal, culturally rooted choice across many families. It is not a disorder and not, on its own, a cause for worry.
Is 'co-sleeping dependence' a real diagnosis?
No — it is a description of a bedtime habit, not a recognised clinical diagnosis. Wanting a parent nearby to fall asleep is a sign of secure attachment, and habits like this are very changeable at six.
How can I gently move my child to sleeping independently?
Go slowly and warmly. Keep a predictable wind-down routine, gradually increase distance over a few weeks (bed, then chair, then doorway), offer a comfort object, and bank up unhurried daytime connection so night-time separation feels safe.
When should I actually seek a check?
Look beyond bedtime. A review is wise if your child also has intense daily separation anxiety, frequent night terrors or sleepwalking, snoring or breathing pauses in sleep, or sleep disruption that affects daytime mood, attention or learning.