Childhood Sleep Difficulties
When to worry about your 2-year-old's sleep
Frequent night-wakings and bedtime resistance are common and usually normal at two. Worry when sleep problems persist most nights over weeks, drain your child by day, or come with snoring, gasping or breathing pauses — that last needs prompt medical review. A clinician can see the whole picture.
If your two-year-old's nights feel like a nightly negotiation, take heart — broken sleep at this age is common, and knowing what's typical helps you spot what isn't.
In short
At two, frequent night-wakings, bedtime resistance and the odd restless night are usually part of normal toddler development, not a disorder. Most two-year-olds need around 11–14 hours of sleep across a 24-hour day, including one nap. It's worth a closer look when sleep difficulties are persistent (most nights, over several weeks), leave your child exhausted or irritable by day, or come with loud snoring, gasping or long pauses in breathing — that last one warrants prompt medical review.What's typical at two — and what's worth watching
Toddlers this age commonly fight bedtime, call out, climb out of cots and wake in the night. Big developmental leaps, new fears of the dark, dropping toward a single nap and testing boundaries all disrupt sleep — and usually settle with steady routines.Consider a closer look if you notice, over several weeks:
- Persistent settling problems — taking very long to fall asleep most nights, or needing a parent present for every wake-up.
- Frequent, prolonged night-wakings that leave your child (and you) drained the next day.
- Daytime impact — constant crankiness, hyperactivity or unusual sleepiness that isn't easing.
- Breathing signs — loud habitual snoring, gasping, mouth-breathing or pauses in breathing during sleep. Mention these to your doctor promptly.
- Unusual movements or events — repeated head-banging, rocking, or frightening episodes that disturb sleep.
Sleep is also woven into overall development — speech, attention and behaviour all lean on good rest. So if poor sleep sits alongside other developmental worries, it's sensible to have the whole picture looked at together.
The Pinnacle way
This is general guidance, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care. Our clinicians take a calm, whole-child view: ruling out medical causes, mapping your child's sleep against their development, and shaping gentle routines and, where helpful, occupational therapy strategies for settling and self-regulation. The aim is restful nights built around your child's strengths — not a label.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org guidance on toddler sleep needs and healthy sleep habits; CDC recommendations on recommended sleep duration for young children; WHO nurturing-care framework on early childhood wellbeing.Next step — Keep a one-week sleep note, and if the pattern is persistent or you notice any breathing concern, book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Look closer if poor sleep is persistent over several weeks, leaves your child exhausted or cranky by day, or comes with loud snoring, gasping, mouth-breathing or pauses in breathing — raise breathing signs with your doctor promptly.
Try this at home
Keep a simple one-week sleep diary — bedtime, wake-ups and morning mood. A steady, calm wind-down routine (bath, book, dim lights, same order each night) often settles many toddler sleep wobbles within a couple of weeks.
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
How much sleep does a 2-year-old need?
Most two-year-olds need around 11–14 hours over a 24-hour day, usually including one daytime nap. Exact needs vary between children, so look at your child's daytime mood and energy as much as the clock.
Is it normal for my 2-year-old to wake at night?
Yes — occasional night-wakings, bedtime resistance and new fears are common at this age, often linked to developmental leaps and boundary-testing. They usually settle with steady, predictable routines.
When should sleep problems be checked by a professional?
Consider a review if difficulties persist most nights over several weeks, clearly affect your child's daytime mood or energy, or come with loud snoring, gasping or pauses in breathing — that breathing concern warrants prompt medical attention.