Early sleep cues are your baby’s “green light” signals that sleep will come easily if you start a nap or bedtime routine soon. Overtired cues show up after your baby has missed that window—stress hormones rise, and falling asleep (and staying asleep) gets harder.
Early cues tend to be subtle, predictable, and repeatable from day to day. Common signs include:
If you respond here—dim lights, diaper change, feeding if needed, short wind-down—many babies drift off with minimal protest.
Overtiredness is often louder and more “wired.” Instead of winding down, your baby may rev up. Signs can include:
When overtired, babies may fight being held or rocked, then crash for short, restless sleep.
Try a 5–10 minute wind-down test. If your baby calms with lower stimulation (quiet voice, swaddle/sleep sack, gentle rocking), you likely caught early cues. If soothing makes them more upset or they seem “tired but frantic,” overtiredness is more likely, and an earlier next sleep time may help.
Watch for your baby’s first consistent cue and aim to start the routine then, not after the big cry begins. For a deeper breakdown and practical examples by age and situation, see the full guide: https://lustrous.store/how-do-i-tell-the-difference-between-early-sleep-cues-and-overtired-cues-in-a-baby/.
Wake windows vary, but newborns often need sleep again within 45–90 minutes, while older babies may stay awake 2–4 hours depending on age and naps. Use your baby’s earliest consistent sleep cue to fine-tune timing.
Leave a comment