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Bedwetting

What causes bedwetting in a 6-year-old?

Bedwetting at six is usually developmental, not behavioural — a still-maturing bladder signal, deep sleep, night-time urine-hormone balance, smaller bladder capacity, a family pattern, or constipation. It is common and typically resolves with time. Sudden return after dryness, daytime wetting or distress warrants a paediatric chat.

What causes bedwetting in a 6-year-old?
What Causes Bedwetting in a 6-Year-Old? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Bedwetting at six is one of the most common worries parents bring to us — and one of the most misunderstood. Here is what is really going on.

In short

Bedwetting (the medical term is nocturnal enuresis) at age six is usually not about laziness, stubbornness or emotional trouble — it is most often a matter of the body's night-time systems still maturing. The three common drivers are a bladder that is still small for night-time volumes, a brain–bladder signal that doesn't yet wake the child, and a developing balance of the hormone that concentrates urine overnight. It often runs in families, and at six it is still well within the normal range of development.

Why it happens at this age

Most dry-night control simply takes time to switch on, and six-year-olds are very much still on that path. The usual reasons include:
  • A maturing bladder signal — the brain hasn't yet learned to wake the child when the bladder is full during deep sleep.
  • Deep sleepers — many children who wet the bed are simply very sound sleepers and don't rouse to the full-bladder cue.
  • Night-time urine balance — the body's overnight hormone that tells the kidneys to make less urine at night (vasopressin) may still be settling into its rhythm.
  • Smaller functional bladder capacity — the bladder holds less overnight than is needed to last till morning.
  • A family pattern — if a parent wet the bed as a child, it is far more likely, and tends to resolve on a similar timeline.
  • Constipation — a full bowel can press on the bladder and reduce its capacity.

Wetting that has been there since infancy (primary enuresis) is the common, developmental kind. If a child was reliably dry for six months or more and then starts again (secondary enuresis), or if there is daytime wetting, pain, excessive thirst or distress, it is worth a prompt chat with your paediatrician.

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 form. For most six-year-olds, bedwetting is a developmental stage that resolves with patience, reassurance and simple routines. Where it sits alongside broader self-care or [adaptive skills](/), a gentle developmental check can give your family a clear, calm starting point.

Trusted sources

Guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) and NICE describes nocturnal enuresis at this age as common and usually developmental, with reassurance and simple measures as first steps before any medical treatment.

Next step — If bedwetting is worrying your family or has recently returned after a dry spell, book a gentle 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

Most worth a paediatric chat: bedwetting that returns after six or more months of being dry, daytime wetting, pain on weeing, unusual thirst, or signs the child is distressed or embarrassed.

Try this at home

Keep it calm and shame-free — never punish a wet night. A regular bedtime, a wee just before sleep, easy-to-reach night-time loo access and treating any constipation help more than pressure ever will.

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 bedwetting at six normal?

Yes. Night-time bladder control matures at different rates, and many six-year-olds are still on that path. It is common and most often resolves on its own with time and reassurance.

Does bedwetting mean something is emotionally wrong?

Usually not. The most common cause is simply a still-maturing brain–bladder signal, deep sleep or a family pattern — not stress or behaviour. Punishment doesn't help and can knock a child's confidence.

When should I speak to a doctor about bedwetting?

Have a chat with your paediatrician if your child was dry for six months or more and then starts wetting again, if there is daytime wetting, pain on weeing, excessive thirst, or if it is causing real distress.

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