Emotional
Emotional milestones for your newborn
Newborn emotional development (0–3 months) is about co-regulation, not milestones — settling when held, calming to your voice, and a first social smile around 6–8 weeks. Responsive, loving care is the most powerful input. There is no checklist your newborn is behind on.
Your newborn's first weeks are not about milestones to chase — they are about the quiet beginnings of feeling safe, soothed and connected to you.
In short
A newborn (0–3 months) does not yet show emotions the way an older baby will. At this age, emotional development looks like settling when held, calming to your voice, and — somewhere around 6–8 weeks — that first true social smile. These early signs of comfort and connection are exactly what to expect, and there is no checklist your newborn is behind on.What to expect in the first 3 months
Newborn emotion is mostly about regulation — moving between alert, fussy and calm states with your help. Look gently for:- Calming to comfort — settling when picked up, rocked or held skin-to-skin
- Responding to your voice and face — quieting, brief gazing, growing attention
- The first social smile — often around 6–8 weeks, a smile back at you (earlier sleepy smiles are reflexive and also lovely)
- Expressing need through crying — and gradually being comforted more easily
These aren't pass-or-fail tests. Babies vary, and premature babies follow their corrected age.
The science
In the WHO ICF framework, emotional functions (b152) describe how feelings arise and are regulated. In newborns this is co-regulation — your calm, warm, predictable responses literally help build your baby's emerging ability to feel settled. Responsive, loving care is the single most powerful input at this stage.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 article. If you ever feel something is off, a gentle developmental check is the right first step. Explore emotional development and how behaviour therapy supports families.Trusted sources
Guided by WHO ICF emotional functions (b152) and trusted paediatric guidance on early social-emotional development.Next step — if your baby isn't calming to comfort or hasn't begun smiling socially by around 3 months, book a reassuring developmental check with our team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
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
Gently watch if your baby cannot be comforted at all, doesn't quiet to your voice or face, or hasn't begun smiling socially by around 3 months (corrected age for preterm babies) — these are worth a developmental check rather than alarm.
Try this at home
Hold your baby skin-to-skin, talk and sing softly, and respond warmly to cries — this everyday co-regulation is exactly what builds early emotional security.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 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
Should my newborn be smiling at me yet?
A true social smile — smiling back at your face or voice — usually appears around 6–8 weeks. Earlier sleepy or reflexive smiles are common and lovely too. If there's no social smile by about 3 months (corrected age for preterm babies), a gentle developmental check is wise.
Can my newborn feel emotions?
Newborns experience basic states like comfort and distress, but they can't yet manage these alone. They rely on you to soothe them — this is called co-regulation, and your calm, warm responses help build their future ability to settle themselves.
Is it normal that my newborn only cries and doesn't show much emotion?
Yes. In the first weeks, crying is your baby's main way of expressing need, and emotion is mostly about moving between alert, fussy and calm states. Richer emotional expression and clear smiles build over the coming weeks.