Find baby guidance by age
Sleep, feeding, milestones, safety, activities, and practical checklists from newborn to 24 months.
What you'll find here
The site focuses on the topics most parents keep reopening as their baby changes month by month.
Short answers, age-based organization, and fewer cluttered detours.
Sleep
Sleep
Age-based sleep overviews and calmer ways to read changing routines.
Feed
Feeding
Simple feeding guidance for milk, solids, and the questions parents revisit most.
Grow
Milestones
Warm, non-alarmist milestone summaries without turning development into a scorecard.
Safe
Safety
Practical reminders for sleep safety, home setup, and everyday risk changes.
Gear
Baby gear
Stage-based gear categories so you can focus on what is useful next.
List
Parent checklists
Simple checklists for routines, appointments, and everyday mental load.
Start with your baby's age
Open the stage you are in now for quick overviews, routines, safety notes, related tools, and the questions parents ask most.
Most parents start with one of the featured ages, then use the month strip below to compare what is changing next.
Newborn
The newborn stage is often about recovery, learning cues, and building simple rhythms rather than strict schedules.
3 Months
This age often brings more social smiles, longer stretches of alertness, and early routine-building without needing rigid timing.
6 Months
Many babies are rolling, reaching, and showing growing interest in mealtimes, while parents balance sleep, play, and readiness for solids.
9 Months
Many babies are crawling, pulling up, babbling, and deeply curious about everything within reach.
12 Months
Many one-year-olds are cruising, pointing, imitating, and shifting routines as family life starts to look a little different.
18 Months
Many toddlers are walking well, climbing often, and understanding far more than they can say clearly.
Shop by need, not by overwhelm
Start with the category tied to your next real problem, then move into a shortlist instead of browsing a giant pile of baby gear.
12 curated picks
Sleep
Monitors, sleep sacks, bassinets, sound support, and travel-sleep helpers parents commonly research first.
Open sleep14 curated picks
Feeding
Bottles, pumping tools, drying gear, high chairs, bibs, mats, and mealtime basics for milk and solids.
Open feeding12 curated picks
Travel And Outings
Strollers, carriers, diaper bags, travel sleep gear, and practical out-the-door tools.
Open travel and outings12 curated picks
Safety And Babyproofing
Gates, locks, anchors, outlet covers, and hazard-reduction tools that make homes safer as mobility grows.
Open safety and babyproofingHelpful tools for tired parents
Quick tools for sleep, feeding, checklists, and developmental notes that lead naturally into the right age pages.
Sleep calculator
Wake Window Calculator
A rule-based planning tool for estimating age-based awake time ranges between naps and bedtime.
Feeding calculator
Feeding Amount Calculator
A rule-based helper for organizing bottle-feeding questions by age, feed count, and optional weight.
Checklist builder
Baby Checklist Generator
Build a baby checklist for daily rhythm, travel, solids, or getting out the door with age-specific reminders.
Tracking tool
Milestone Tracker
Track age-based milestone prompts and keep simple notes for the next pediatric visit.
Popular baby questions
Quick answers for the things parents look up repeatedly, with room to ask your pediatrician when something feels off.
How do I use a baby age guide without comparing too much?Open
Use age guides as a general map rather than a scorecard. Many babies follow slightly different timelines, and it is always okay to ask your pediatrician when something feels unclear or concerning.
What topics are most helpful to review each month?Open
Parents often revisit sleep, feeding, safety, play ideas, and gear needs as routines change. A quick monthly check-in can help you notice what still fits and what needs updating.
When should I call my pediatrician?Open
If you notice feeding difficulty, breathing concerns, injury, a sudden change from your baby's usual pattern, or you simply feel worried, it is reasonable to check in. Trusting your concern is part of caring well.
Are the tools meant to replace professional advice?Open
No. The tools are meant to help organize questions and everyday planning. They do not replace medical care or individualized guidance.
