Frequent Night Waking
What causes frequent night waking in a 1-year-old?
Frequent night waking in a 1-year-old is usually a normal phase driven by sleep-cycle transitions, separation awareness, teething, hunger and developmental leaps, and it generally settles with consistent gentle routines. A doctor's review is wise only if waking comes with breathing pauses, pain, poor weight gain or wider developmental concerns.
If your one-year-old is up again at 2 a.m., you are not doing anything wrong — and you are far from alone.
In short
Frequent night waking at 12 months is usually a normal, developmentally healthy phase rather than a sign of a problem. The common drivers are sleep-cycle transitions, separation awareness, teething, hunger or thirst, big daytime developmental leaps (crawling, standing, first words), and small disruptions to routine or sleep associations. Most settle with consistent, gentle bedtime habits. A small number of wakings have a physical cause worth a doctor's review.Why it happens at this age
Around the first birthday, several things land at once:- Sleep architecture — babies cycle between light and deep sleep roughly every 45–60 minutes and naturally surface between cycles. A baby who has learned to resettle independently drifts back off; one who relies on rocking or feeding to fall asleep will call out for the same help overnight.
- Separation awareness — at this stage your child genuinely understands you exist even when out of sight, so waking alone can feel unsettling.
- Developmental leaps — new skills like pulling to stand, cruising and early words mean a busy brain that "practises" at night.
- Teething, hunger, illness or a blocked nose — physical comfort can briefly disrupt sleep.
- Routine and environment — a late or missed nap, an over-tired bedtime, light, noise or a changed room can all fragment sleep.
When to mention it to a doctor
Most night waking needs reassurance and consistency, not investigation. Do check with your paediatrician if your child snores loudly or pauses in breathing, wakes screaming in pain, is not gaining weight, seems excessively sleepy by day, or if waking is paired with concerns about overall development or communication.The Pinnacle way
Sleep, feeding and self-settling are part of the adaptive (self-care) domain we support every day. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a website or an app. If night waking sits alongside any wider worry, [a simple developmental check](/) gives you clarity and a calm plan, and our occupational therapy team can help shape gentle sleep and self-soothing routines.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on healthy infant sleep and night waking (healthychildren.org); WHO and Nurturing Care framework on responsive early-childhood routines.Next step — If your gut says something more is going on, [book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician](/) for reassurance and a clear plan.
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
Watch whether waking settles with a consistent bedtime routine over a couple of weeks. Flag to a doctor if you notice loud snoring, breathing pauses, waking in pain, poor weight gain or daytime sleepiness.
Try this at home
Keep a calm, predictable wind-down — same order, same songs, dim light — and let your baby practise falling asleep drowsy-but-awake so they can resettle the same way at 2 a.m.
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 a 1-year-old to wake several times a night?
Yes. Frequent night waking is very common and usually a normal developmental phase. Babies surface between sleep cycles, and many simply need to learn to resettle on their own. It typically improves with a consistent, gentle bedtime routine.
Does teething cause night waking?
Teething can cause brief discomfort that disrupts sleep, but it rarely explains weeks of waking on its own. If waking persists, look at sleep associations, naps and routine, and mention ongoing pain or distress to your paediatrician.
When should I see a doctor about my baby's night waking?
Check with a doctor if waking comes with loud snoring or breathing pauses, waking in clear pain, poor weight gain, unusual daytime sleepiness, or if it sits alongside wider concerns about your child's development or communication.