Very Early Rising
Should I worry about very early rising in a 1-year-old?
Very early rising at one year is usually normal — sleep rhythms are still maturing, and bedtime, nap timing, light, hunger or noise can nudge waking earlier. It is rarely a developmental concern. Gentle routine changes settle most cases. Seek a check only if it comes with snoring or breathing pauses in sleep, or delays in talking, connecting or moving.
Greeting the dawn before you're ready can be exhausting — but for most one-year-olds, very early rising is a normal twist of their settling body clock, not a worry.
In short
Very early rising — waking at 5am or even earlier, bright and ready for the day — is extremely common and usually completely typical in one-year-olds. At this age sleep rhythms are still maturing, naps are shifting, and small things like early bedtimes, light, hunger or noise can nudge waking earlier. It is rarely a sign of a developmental problem. A gentle developmental check is wise only if the early rising comes alongside other concerns — such as delays in talking, connecting or moving, or unusual breathing and movements in sleep.What's usually happening at 12–24 months
Most toddlers naturally wake somewhere between 6 and 7am, but many drift earlier for ordinary, fixable reasons:- Body clock still settling — at one year the internal rhythm is maturing, and waking time can wander week to week.
- Bedtime too early or nap timing off — going to bed very early, or a late or long afternoon nap, can push the morning wake earlier.
- Light and sound — early summer light through curtains, birdsong or household noise easily rouses a light-sleeping toddler.
- Hunger or comfort — a small early-morning feed, a wet nappy or feeling cold can trigger waking.
- Overtiredness — counter-intuitively, a too-late bedtime can cause earlier, more fragmented waking.
Gentle adjustments — black-out curtains, a slightly later or consistent bedtime, reviewing nap timing, and keeping the room calm and dark until a sensible "wake" time — settle most early rising over a few weeks.
When a check is wise
Very early rising on its own is not a reason for alarm. Speak to your clinician if it travels with: loud snoring, gasping or long breathing pauses in sleep; very few words, little eye contact or not responding to their name by 18 months; not walking by 18 months; or if your instinct says something about your child's overall development isn't quite right. Then it's the wider picture — not the early waking — that's worth a calm look.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 list. If you'd simply like reassurance, our team can review your child's overall [development](/) and daily routine, and our occupational therapy clinicians can help with sleep and self-regulation strategies where useful.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on toddler sleep patterns and healthy sleep routines; CDC developmental milestones for 12–24 months; WHO nurturing-care guidance on early childhood development and daily rhythms.Next step — Trust your instinct, try a few gentle sleep adjustments, and if you'd like a calm, clear review of your child's overall development, book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.
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
Early rising alone is usually fine. Seek a check if it comes with loud snoring, gasping or breathing pauses in sleep, very few words or no response to name by 18 months, not walking by 18 months, or any wider concern about your child's development.
Try this at home
Try black-out curtains and keep the room dark and quiet until a sensible wake time, and review nap and bedtime timing — a too-early or too-late bedtime can both push waking earlier.
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 it normal for my 1-year-old to wake at 5am?
Yes, very often. Sleep rhythms are still maturing at one year, and waking earlier than you'd like is common. Light, early bedtimes, nap timing, hunger or noise can all nudge waking earlier, and small routine changes usually help.
Can early rising mean a developmental problem?
Very rarely on its own. Early rising becomes worth a clinician's look only when it travels with other signs — loud snoring or breathing pauses in sleep, or delays in talking, connecting or moving.
How can I help my toddler wake later?
Try black-out curtains, keep the room dark and calm until a sensible wake time, review nap timing, and aim for a consistent bedtime that isn't too early or too late. Most early rising settles over a few weeks.