Nightmares And Night Terrors
Behaviours That Often Occur With Nightmares And Night Terrors
Nightmares and night terrors often occur alongside other sleep behaviours such as sleepwalking, sleep-talking and bedwetting, and can be linked to bedtime anxiety, daytime tiredness and irritability. Most are a normal part of childhood that eases with reassurance and good sleep routines. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
When sleep turns stormy, the daytime clues — tiredness, big feelings, restless nights — often travel together, and understanding the whole picture brings real reassurance.
In short
Nightmares and night terrors rarely happen in isolation. They often appear alongside other sleep-related behaviours — sleepwalking, sleep-talking, bedwetting and restless or fragmented sleep — and can be linked to daytime tiredness, irritability, anxiety or trouble settling at bedtime. Most of these are part of normal childhood and ease with time, good sleep routines and reassurance. They are very common and, on their own, are not a sign that something is wrong.Behaviours that often travel together
- Other sleep events — night terrors often go hand-in-hand with sleepwalking and sleep-talking, because they all arise from the same deep-sleep stage. A child may sit up, mumble, or walk about while still asleep.
- Bedtime resistance and anxiety — children who have frightening dreams may become reluctant to go to bed, want the light on, or call out for company. This bedtime worry is understandable and usually settles with gentle, consistent reassurance.
- Daytime tiredness and big feelings — broken sleep can leave a child more irritable, tearful, clingy or unfocused the next day. Overtiredness can, in turn, make night terrors more likely, creating a loop worth gently breaking.
- Bedwetting — this can occur in the same deep-sleep window and sometimes accompanies night terrors, especially during a particularly tiring or unsettled phase.
- Triggers that cluster — illness or fever, a change in routine, late or skipped naps, an exciting or stressful day, and not enough sleep overall can all make these night-time events more frequent for a while.
The key reassurance: nightmares usually wake a child who can remember and be comforted, while night terrors happen in deep sleep and the child has no memory of them by morning. Both are very common phases of growing up.
When to seek a check
Most nightmares and night terrors fade as children mature and need only patience and a calm bedtime routine. Consider a developmental or medical check if the events are very frequent or violent, if your child is excessively sleepy by day, snores heavily or pauses in breathing during sleep, if there are unusual movements or stiffening that could suggest something needing medical review, or if rising daytime anxiety is affecting your child's wellbeing.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 app or online form. If sleep disruption is paired with anxiety, big emotions or developmental worries, our team builds a gentle, whole-child picture and a plan shaped around your family, through behavioural and emotional support. Learn how a clinician-led structured assessment works, or explore [how Pinnacle supports your child](/).Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) guidance on nightmares, night terrors and childhood sleep; NHS/NICE-aligned parent guidance on parasomnias; WHO healthy-childhood sleep principles.Next step — If unsettled sleep and daytime worries are affecting your child, book a gentle assessment 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
Watch for very frequent or violent night events, heavy snoring or breathing pauses in sleep, unusual stiffening or movements, excessive daytime sleepiness, or rising bedtime anxiety affecting your child's wellbeing.
Try this at home
Keep a calm, predictable wind-down routine and ensure enough total sleep — overtiredness makes night terrors more likely, so an earlier, unhurried bedtime often helps more than anything.
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
Do night terrors and sleepwalking happen together?
Yes — both arise from the same deep-sleep stage, so children who have night terrors often also sleepwalk or sleep-talk. These usually pass as a child grows and need only a safe, calm sleep environment.
Can poor sleep cause daytime behaviour problems?
Broken sleep can leave a child more irritable, tearful or unfocused by day, and overtiredness can in turn make night terrors more likely. Improving total sleep often eases both the night events and daytime mood.
Is bedtime anxiety normal after nightmares?
It is very understandable — a child who has frightening dreams may resist bed or want the light on. Gentle, consistent reassurance usually settles this over time without needing any special intervention.