Silicone Rabbit Night Light (7 Colours, USB)
Silicone Rabbit Night Light (7 Colours, USB): Is It Right for Your Child?
The Silicone Rabbit Night Light (7 Colours, USB) is a soft, USB-rechargeable comfort lamp — a sensory and bedtime aid, not a therapy or medical device. It can suit children soothed by soft steady light and tactile comfort; fix it on one warm colour for sleep and keep the cable away from the cot. It supports a routine but never replaces clinical assessment.
A soft glowing bunny on the bedside table can feel like a small thing — but the right night light can genuinely ease bedtimes and gentle sensory settling.
In short
The Silicone Rabbit Night Light (7 Colours, USB) is a soft, squeezable rabbit-shaped lamp made of food-grade silicone, USB-rechargeable, that cycles through seven colours with a dimmable, flicker-free glow. It is a comfort and sensory tool, not a therapy device or a medical product — it can help create a calm, predictable bedtime routine and offer gentle visual and tactile input for many children. Whether it suits your child depends on how your child responds to light, touch and routine.What it offers — and how to judge fit
The silicone body is warm and yielding to hold, which some children find soothing as a tactile comfort object. The colour-change feature can be played as a calming wind-down (settle on one steady, warm colour) rather than a stimulating light show.Good signs it may suit your child:
- Your child is soothed by soft, steady light and dislikes a fully dark room.
- They enjoy holding or squeezing a soft object as part of settling.
- A predictable "choose-a-colour, then steady glow" step helps signal that sleep is coming.
Things to watch:
- For children who are over-stimulated by changing colours, fix it on one warm tone (amber or red is gentlest near sleep) rather than cycling.
- Keep the charging cable away from the cot, and choose a steady (non-flickering) setting.
- A night light supports a routine — it does not replace one. The bedtime rhythm matters more than the gadget.
The Pinnacle way
A night light is a lovely everyday support, but it is not a diagnostic or therapy tool — and persistent difficulties with sleep, settling or sensory responses deserve a proper look. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a product or an app. If your child's sensory responses or sleep are a real worry, our occupational therapy team can help, and you can read more about choosing tools like this on the Silicone Rabbit Night Light page.Trusted sources
Guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) on healthy sleep routines for young children; WHO nurturing-care principles on responsive, predictable caregiving environments.Next step — Unsure whether sensory or sleep concerns need attention? 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
If colour-changing light over-stimulates your child, fix it on one warm tone (amber or red) near sleep. Watch for flicker, keep the charging cable clear of the cot, and remember the bedtime routine matters more than the device.
Try this at home
Make it part of a calm wind-down: let your child pick a colour, then settle it on one warm, steady glow as the signal that sleep is coming.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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 the Silicone Rabbit Night Light a therapy or medical device?
No. It is a comfort and sensory aid for bedtime and settling, not a diagnostic or therapy device. It can support a calming routine, but it is not a substitute for clinical assessment or therapy.
Which colour is best near sleep?
A steady, warm tone such as amber or red is gentlest as your child winds down. Avoid cycling colours close to sleep, as changing light can be stimulating for some children.
How do I know if it suits my child?
It tends to suit children soothed by soft steady light, who dislike full darkness, or who enjoy holding a soft object while settling. If changing colours over-stimulate your child, fix it on one warm tone or choose a simpler light.
Is it safe near the cot?
Choose a steady, flicker-free setting and keep the USB charging cable well away from the cot or any reachable area. Use it as a bedside glow rather than an in-bed toy for very young children.