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Sleep Calculator for Babies and Kids: Sleep Cycles by Age

Sleep cycles in babies and young children work differently from the 90-minute adult cycle the rest of this site is built around, so it's worth treating this age group separately. Newborn sleep cycles are much shorter — roughly 50 to 60 minutes — and contain a much higher proportion of active (REM-like) sleep, which is thought to support the rapid brain development happening in the first months of life.

As children grow, cycle length gradually lengthens and the balance shifts toward more deep sleep, approaching the adult 90-minute pattern by the early teenage years. This is one reason toddlers and young children wake more easily and more often than adults — their cycles are shorter, so there are simply more transition points during the night where a partial wake-up can happen.

Total sleep needs also change significantly by age. Infants (4–12 months) typically need 12–16 hours across a 24-hour period, including naps; toddlers (1–2 years) need 11–14 hours; preschoolers (3–5 years) need 10–13 hours; and school-age children (6–12 years) need 9–12 hours. Unlike adults, naps are a normal and necessary part of hitting these totals for most of early childhood.

Because young children's cycles are shorter and lighter sleep is more frequent, consistent sleep and nap schedules matter even more than they do for adults — a regular routine helps a child's body anticipate sleep and move through cycles more smoothly, rather than fighting against an unpredictable schedule.

As children move into the school-age years and cycles lengthen toward the adult pattern, the same cycle-based thinking used elsewhere on this site starts to apply more directly: working backward from a school wake-up time in roughly 90-minute blocks can help identify a bedtime that lines up with a natural, lighter point in their sleep, rather than an arbitrary round number of hours.

This page is meant as general guidance rather than medical advice — if a child is struggling with sleep consistently, or you have concerns about their sleep patterns, a pediatrician is the right person to guide next steps.

Want to plan tonight's sleep? Use the sleep calculator.