Sleep regressions. Night wakings. Nap refusals. These challenges are familiar to nearly every parent of a baby or toddler. And when they hit, one of the first pieces of advice you may hear is, “You should sleep train.”
But what if that approach does not feel right for your family? What if your instincts, values, or circumstances make you hesitant to try cry-it-out or timed check-ins?
The good news is that you can support your baby’s sleep — through regressions and transitions — without formal sleep training. Responsive, relationship-based strategies can help your baby rest better while still honoring their developmental needs and your caregiving style.
What Is Sleep Training, and Why Do Some Families Skip It?
Sleep training refers to a variety of methods designed to teach babies to fall asleep and stay asleep independently. These range from extinction (cry-it-out) to gentler approaches like the Ferber method or gradual withdrawal.
Many families find sleep training helpful. Others do not feel comfortable letting their baby cry without comfort or may prefer a slower, more connected approach.
According to a 2022 review published in the Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics, most sleep training methods are safe and effective for short-term improvements in sleep. However, the study also notes that many babies eventually sleep through the night without any formal training, simply through maturation and responsive care (source).
How to Support Better Sleep Without Training
You do not need to choose between restful nights and responsive parenting. Here are gentle, evidence-informed ways to navigate sleep changes especially during regressions without using traditional sleep training methods.
1. Understand What Is Normal
The first step is shifting your expectations. Frequent night waking in the first year is biologically normal. Babies have shorter sleep cycles, need more physical closeness, and are still developing their circadian rhythms.
Baby sleep regressions often strike at 4, 8, 12, 18, and 24 months. These regressions are linked to developmental milestones and are not caused by bad habits.
Knowing what is expected helps reduce unnecessary pressure to “fix” something that is actually progressing well.
2. Strengthen Sleep Cues and Routines
Even without sleep training, routines matter. Babies thrive on predictability, especially during regressions. A consistent bedtime routine helps cue the brain that sleep is coming and lowers stress.
Your routine can be simple:
- Dim the lights
- Gentle bath or massage
- A short book or lullaby
- Breast or bottle feed
- Cuddle and wind-down
These steps do not need to be rigid. They just need to be repeated with warmth and predictability.
3. Use Responsive Settling
Instead of leaving your baby to cry alone, responsive settling allows you to offer comfort while still encouraging sleep. This could look like:
- Patting or rubbing your baby’s back
- Sitting beside the crib while they fall asleep
- Humming or shushing gently
- Picking them up briefly, then putting them back down
This approach may take longer, but it teaches your baby that sleep is safe and that you are a consistent source of comfort.
4. Adjust the Sleep Environment
A calm, dark, and quiet space helps reduce external distractions that can prevent restful sleep. Try:
- Blackout curtains
- White noise machines
- Room temperatures between 68 and 72 degrees Fahrenheit
- Safe sleep spaces, such as a crib or bassinet
These changes can support deeper, more consolidated sleep even when your baby still needs comfort to fall asleep.
5. Respond to Emotional Needs
Sleep disruptions are not always about sleep. Your baby may be processing new experiences, teething, feeling anxious about separation, or simply needing extra reassurance.
When babies feel safe and emotionally supported, they are more likely to return to better sleep over time. This may mean holding them a little longer, co-sleeping safely for a short phase, or simply showing up calmly through the night wakings.
Developmental psychologist Dr. Mona Delahooke emphasizes that babies learn emotional regulation through co-regulation. Your calm presence during sleep disruptions builds long-term security (source).
6. Tune in to Wake Windows and Sleep Pressure
As your baby grows, they may need more or less awake time between naps and bedtime. Adjusting wake windows can help prevent overtiredness or under-tiredness, both of which can lead to poor sleep.
Use age-based wake window charts as a guide, and observe your baby’s cues. Yawning, eye rubbing, or zoning out may mean it is time to wind down.
7. Protect Your Own Rest
Gentle sleep support can be rewarding, but it is also demanding. If you are navigating regressions without formal sleep training, make sure you are getting support too.
- Trade off night shifts with a partner
- Ask for help from family or friends
- Nap when your baby naps, even occasionally
- Let go of nonessential tasks during hard sleep phases
Your well-being is just as important as your baby’s.
Final Thoughts: You Are the Sleep Strategy
Responsive parenting does not mean avoiding structure. It means listening to your baby, understanding what they need, and providing the right support at the right time.
If sleep training does not feel like the right path, that is okay. Many babies sleep well with time, routine, and the steady presence of a caregiver who shows up especially when things are hard.
For ongoing support and insights into each stage of development, this expert-backed guide to baby sleep regressions offers clear, compassionate guidance for tired parents.
Your presence is powerful. Your intuition is valid. And even without formal training, you are exactly what your baby needs.