Why a Tummy Time Routine Matters
Tummy time is one of the most important activities for your baby development. It strengthens neck, shoulder, and back muscles needed for rolling, crawling, and eventually walking. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends starting tummy time from day one — but how much, how often, and what it looks like changes dramatically as your baby grows.
Here is a practical routine for each stage, including exactly what to do and which tools help most.
Week 1-2: Getting Started (1-2 min per session)
What to do:
- Place your baby on your chest (reclined at 45 degrees) — this counts as tummy time
- Brief floor sessions: 1-2 minutes, 2-3 times per day
- Keep sessions right after a diaper change, before feeding (not after, to avoid spit-up)
Best tools:
- Your chest (the original tummy time surface)
- A rolled towel under babys chest for support
- A high-contrast cloth book placed 8-10 inches from babys face
Daily goal:
5-10 minutes total across all sessions
Week 3-4: Building Tolerance (3-5 min per session)
What to do:
- Transition to flat floor surface more often
- Place interesting objects at eye level to encourage head lifting
- Get down on the floor with your baby — face-to-face contact is the best motivator
Best tools:
- Mirror tummy time cloth book — babies work harder to lift their head when they can see a face (even their own reflection)
- Self-standing cloth books that prop upright without your help
Daily goal:
15-20 minutes total
Month 2: Active Engagement (5-8 min per session)
What to do:
- 3-4 sessions per day, 5-8 minutes each
- Introduce different positions: on the floor, on a play mat, on a nursing pillow
- Start placing toys slightly to the side to encourage head turning
What to watch for:
- Baby lifting head to 45 degrees during tummy time
- Baby tracking objects with both eyes
- Less crying during sessions — tolerance is building
Best tools:
- Self-standing cloth books with crinkle pages — the sound rewards head-lifting effort
- Our self-standing high contrast tummy time book stays upright so your baby has a target to look at
Daily goal:
20-30 minutes total
Month 3-4: Reaching and Pushing (8-12 min per session)
What to do:
- Baby should be more comfortable on tummy now
- Encourage reaching for toys placed just out of grasp
- Try tummy time on different surfaces: play mat, grass (with blanket), crib mattress
Milestones to watch:
- Lifting head to 90 degrees (chest off the ground)
- Supporting weight on forearms
- Reaching for objects with one hand while bearing weight on the other
Best tools:
- Cloth books with crinkle pages within babys reach
- Taggy cloth books with short fabric loops to grab
Daily goal:
30-45 minutes total
Month 5-6: Pre-Crawling (10-15+ min per session)
What to do:
- Baby may start pivoting in a circle on their tummy
- Place toys in a semi-circle to encourage pivoting and reaching in all directions
- Some babies start pushing up to hands and knees (pre-crawling position)
Best tools:
- Multiple cloth books arranged in a circle for 360-degree motivation
- Touch-and-feel books that reward reaching with interesting textures
- See our full tummy time mirror guide for product recommendations
Daily goal:
45-60 minutes total (can include some seated floor play)
Complete Tummy Time Schedule Summary
| Age | Session Length | Sessions/Day | Daily Total | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1-2 | 1-2 min | 2-3 | 5-10 min | Tolerance |
| Week 3-4 | 3-5 min | 3-4 | 15-20 min | Head lifting |
| Month 2 | 5-8 min | 3-4 | 20-30 min | Visual tracking |
| Month 3-4 | 8-12 min | 3-4 | 30-45 min | Reaching |
| Month 5-6 | 10-15 min | 3-4 | 45-60 min | Pre-crawling |
What If My Baby Hates Tummy Time?
This is the most common concern we hear. Some strategies that work:
- Start on your chest: The elevated angle makes it easier and your face is the best motivator
- Use a mirror: Babies will lift their head to see their reflection. A mirror cloth book is purpose-built for this
- Keep sessions short: Five 2-minute sessions beat one crying 10-minute session
- Time it right: After a diaper change, before a feeding, when baby is alert but not hungry
- Gradually increase angle: Start on a nursing pillow (elevated), progress to flat surface
For the complete guide to choosing the right tummy time toys, visit our tummy time mirror guide or explore all 0-6 month cloth books.
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