13 New Parent Sleeping Tips
New parents often struggle with sleep deprivation, but expert advice can make a significant difference. This article presents practical strategies to help both parents and babies achieve better rest. From syncing your sleep with your baby’s naps to creating a consistent bedtime routine, these tips offer a comprehensive approach to improving sleep for the whole family.
- Sync Rest with Baby’s Naps
- Focus on Co-Regulation for Better Sleep
- Observe and Adapt to Your Baby’s Rhythm
- Prioritize Nighttime Sleep Over Daytime Naps
- Prevent Overtiredness for Easier Bedtimes
- Schedule Sleep Shifts Like Professional Commitments
- Treat Sleep as a Business System
- Aim for Total Sleep, Not Perfect Naps
- Balance Flexibility and Predictable Bedtime Routine
- Create Micro-Recovery Moments During Baby’s Naps
- Establish Consistent Bedtime Routine for Security
- Create Predictable Environment Over Fixed Schedule
- Use Rhythmic Touch to Soothe Baby
Sync Rest with Baby’s Naps
One piece of advice I received as a new parent was to “sleep when the baby sleeps”. At first, I brushed it off, thinking I could use that time to catch up on chores or work. But after a week, the exhaustion hit, and I realized how valuable those short rest periods were. By syncing my rest with my baby’s naps, I was able to recharge enough to stay patient, present, and calm through the more demanding moments.
The strategy that worked best for both of us was creating a consistent bedtime routine, a simple sequence of feeding, dimming the lights, and soft lullabies. This helped signal to the baby that it was time to sleep, making it easier to settle down. It wasn’t perfect, but it did help build a rhythm that gave us more rest and made the newborn phase more manageable.
Desiree Teng
Executive Assistant, Singapore Mummy
Focus on Co-Regulation for Better Sleep
As a somatic therapist who works with overwhelmed families, I learned that baby sleep issues are often nervous system regulation issues – for both baby and parents. The advice that changed everything for us was focusing on co-regulation instead of just sleep training schedules.
I started using gentle orienting techniques with my baby – softly naming what we could see and hear in the room during bedtime routines. “I see the soft light, I hear the quiet fan.” This helped both of us feel grounded and safe. My nervous system staying calm was key to helping the baby’s system settle too.
What worked best was treating those middle-of-the-night wake-ups as opportunities for nervous system support rather than battles to win. I’d do slow, rhythmic swaying while focusing on my own breathing. When my body felt regulated, the baby picked up on that calm energy much faster than when I was tense and frustrated.
The game-changer was realizing that my reactivity to sleep disruption was actually making everything harder. Once I learned to work with my own stress response, our whole family’s sleep improved within weeks.
Amy Hagerstrom
Owner, Amy Hagerstrom LCSW
Observe and Adapt to Your Baby’s Rhythm
As a licensed school psychologist who founded a mental health practice and mother of two children born eleven years apart, I learned something critical: the advice that worked for my first baby was completely ineffective for my second.
With my first son, everyone advised me to let him “cry it out” and adhere to rigid schedules. He was actually colicky and had formula allergies, but I was unaware of this at the time. I felt like I was failing when he rejected nursing at four months and cried incessantly.
Eleven years later, with my daughter, I learned to observe her cues instead of following generic advice. She revealed her natural rhythm to me–longer stretches of sleep between 11 PM and 4 AM, and shorter but more frequent naps during the day. When I stopped resisting her patterns and worked with them, we both slept better.
The most effective strategy was tracking her actual sleep patterns for two weeks, then building our routine around what she was already doing naturally. Instead of imposing a 7 PM bedtime because “that’s what babies need,” I noticed she naturally became drowsy around 8:30 PM and worked with that schedule.
Christine Willing
CEO, Think Happy Live Healthy
Prioritize Nighttime Sleep Over Daytime Naps
The best advice I received was actually to ignore the conventional advice “Sleep when the baby sleeps.”
On the face of it, the logic would be sound. Babies sleep a lot, but infrequently and throughout the day. If you copy their sleep schedule, you would clock more hours of sleep.
This, unfortunately, is utopian nonsense that doesn’t work in reality. First of all, you won’t sleep; your brain won’t let you. Instead, you spend the whole time with one eye open, waiting for the baby to wake up.
Secondly, if you did pull it off, multiple naps would inevitably harm your circadian rhythm. Young babies don’t have a proper sleep schedule, but you do, and you alter this at your peril.
Lastly, not everyone is wired for naps. Many people simply can’t nap, even under ideal conditions. Merely being tired doesn’t change that reality for people; it just means wasted time when time is already in short supply.
Instead, use nap times more strategically and get necessary chores out of the way. That way, when the evening does arrive, you won’t have to stay up later dealing with a chore backlog.
This is how you get more sleep, by freeing up your evenings and taking care of chores during the day.
Parents aren’t nocturnal animals, and our most restorative sleep is at nighttime. Naps simply aren’t a proper substitute for this, and forcing them likely hampers your nighttime sleep, making them a net negative.
Ben Schwencke
Chief Psychologist, Test Partnership
Prevent Overtiredness for Easier Bedtimes
It may not sound obvious at first, but one of the best things new parents can do is avoid letting their baby become overtired. When infants stay awake too long, their bodies release stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline. Many assume that these induce drowsiness, but what they actually do is make the babies alert. This creates a cycle where the baby is wired, restless, and much harder to settle. Many parents think keeping a baby awake longer will help them sleep better at night, but in reality, it leads to the opposite outcome.
My advice to parents is that they should be very attentive to some of the early signs of sleepiness, such as rubbing of the eyes, turning the head, or fussing in a low-key way. Responding to those initial signs before they get out of control makes the baby calmer, and thereby the baby falls asleep with ease. In my experience, children who are put to bed before they cross that overtired threshold generally sleep for longer stretches and settle with much less effort.
Dr. Maria Knöbel
Medical Director and Co-Founder, Medical Cert UK
Schedule Sleep Shifts Like Professional Commitments
The best sleep advice I received as a new parent was to treat rest the same way I treat court deadlines: block it off and protect it like it’s non-negotiable. Instead of hoping for sleep to “work out,” my spouse and I created a shift schedule, almost like billing hours. One of us was “on duty” for a set block of time while the other slept without guilt or interruption. This removed the constant tug-of-war over who was more tired and guaranteed that at least one of us was functioning well the next day.
What surprised me most was how this structure reduced resentment and exhaustion at the same time. Babies are unpredictable, but when I treated my own rest like a professional commitment, the whole household ran more smoothly. That single change—scheduling sleep shifts—was the most practical and sanity-saving strategy I found as a new parent.
Adam Cohen
Managing Partner, Ticket Crushers Law
Treat Sleep as a Business System
The best advice I received was actually from another entrepreneur father – treat sleep like a business system that needs optimization. It sounds unusual, but allow me to explain.
We began tracking patterns as I would track conversion rates. When did the baby actually fall into deep sleep? Which pre-sleep routine worked? My wife and I divided nights into “shifts” – I would handle 9 PM to 2 AM since I’m a night owl anyway, and she would take over after. It was a game-changer.
However, honestly, the most significant thing was letting go of perfection. Some nights were just… difficult. And that’s acceptable. I learned to take 20-minute power naps between calls when needed. Running a business taught me to be adaptable, and it turns out that skill translates quite well to parenting.
Oh, and blackout curtains. They’re worth every penny.
Ajinkya Thete
CEO, CMO, NeonXpert Custom Signs
Aim for Total Sleep, Not Perfect Naps
A nurse told me, “Aim for total sleep, not perfect naps.” That reframed everything. The first thing I check is 24-hour totals; if the day runs light, we protect an early bedtime. One thing I always notice: a 20-minute wind-down, with lights down, a soft song, and short cuddle beats, followed by long rocking. The question is whether we’re hungry, gassy, or overtired; I run feed, burp, and diaper in that order.
Mobile-first for us, too, white noise on a spare phone, room at 69degF, and blackout shades. We capped contact naps at 30 minutes, so crib sleep stayed the anchor. A 10:30 p.m. dream feed stretched the first night block. Track the basics, keep the routine short, and let “good enough” carry you.
Anna Zhang
Head of Marketing, U7BUY
Balance Flexibility and Predictable Bedtime Routine
The best tip was to follow the rhythm of rest with the baby instead of forcing a schedule too early in their life. Rather than forcing the household into a rigid schedule, short naps were taken when the baby slept (without waiting for long periods for parents to feel rested), which prevented the fatigue normally experienced when waiting for longer periods for the baby to fall asleep. For the baby, developing a fixed bedtime routine with dimming lights, a quiet feed, and gentle rocking signaled that nighttime sleep was different from daytime naps. That balance of flexibility for the parent and predictability for the baby meant the transition went more smoothly, and there was less stress in the first months.
Belle Florendo
Marketing Coordinator, Sunny Glen Children’s Home
Create Micro-Recovery Moments During Baby’s Naps
Working at Glow Up Med Spa, I frequently encounter exhausted new parents coming in for treatments. The game-changing advice I received was from a client who swore by “micro-recovery” periods – treating your skin and stress levels as you would after any medical procedure.
What worked brilliantly was creating a 5-minute reset routine during the baby’s naps. I’d splash cold water on my face, apply a hydrating serum, and do 10 deep breaths – similar to our post-treatment cooling protocols at the spa. This tiny ritual helped me feel human again when everything felt chaotic.
The strategy that made the biggest difference was batch-preparing these “recovery moments” like we prep treatment rooms. I’d set up a basket by my bedside with face mist, lip balm, and hand cream so I could do quick self-care even during 3 AM feedings. One of my colleagues tracked this approach and found her stress levels dropped noticeably within a week.
Your body is healing and adapting just like after any aesthetic treatment – consistency with small, restorative actions beats trying to do everything perfectly.
Hailee Goldberg
Clinical Manager, Glow Up Med Spa
Establish Consistent Bedtime Routine for Security
The best advice I received about sleep was to establish a consistent bedtime routine that signals to your baby it’s time to wind down. In my experience, creating a 30-minute routine that included a soothing bath, putting on pajamas and a sleep sack, and reading books in a cozy chair before placing my child in the crib awake but calm worked remarkably well. This approach took about two weeks to become effective, but the predictability created a sense of security that helped my baby transition to sleep more easily.
Ashley Kenny
Co-Founder, Heirloom Video Books
Create Predictable Environment Over Fixed Schedule
The best tip was to establish a predictable environment rather than pursue a fixed schedule. We aimed at ensuring that the room was dark, quiet, and maintained at the same temperature, which cued rest even in cases where napping and bedtimes changed. White noise was also incorporated into the daily routine, and it helped to mask the sounds of the house and develop consistency in our baby. Instead of trying to impose an inflexible clock-based approach, we came to identify some of the first indicators of fatigue and address them in that context. The practice lessened nighttime fights and eventually resulted in more time with unbroken sleep. To us, as new parents, it came as a relief because we did not have to worry that we had failed in case the baby did not stick to a certain schedule.
Rory Keel
Owner, Equipoise Coffee
Use Rhythmic Touch to Soothe Baby
The best advice I received was from my grandmother: “Babies need to feel your presence, not see it.” She meant that physical touch and rhythm matter more than constantly hovering over them. This resonated deeply with me because I grew up without a father figure and was determined to be the hands-on dad I never had.
What actually worked was creating consistent physical comfort without exhausting myself. I developed a gentle patting rhythm paired with heartbeat sounds that mimicked what babies hear in the womb. My baby would settle within minutes instead of the 45+ minute struggles we were having before.
The breakthrough came when I realized I could replicate this soothing technique mechanically. As a bureau chief managing 28 employees, I knew the power of consistent systems over sporadic effort. That’s exactly what led me to create the Sleepy Baby device – it provides that same rhythmic patting and heartbeat sound without parents burning out from hours of manual soothing.
The data speaks for itself: families using rhythmic patting combined with womb-like sounds see babies fall asleep 60% faster than traditional rocking or shushing alone. It’s not about more complex solutions – it’s about consistent, biologically-appropriate comfort that babies actually recognize from their earliest development.
Gary Harutyunyan
Owner, Sleepy Baby