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Development January 10, 2026

Baby Milestones: What to Expect in the First Year

A month-by-month guide to your baby's developmental milestones, from newborn to 12 months. Plus, when to talk to your pediatrician.

By Dr. Michael Thompson, Pediatrician
Baby Milestones: What to Expect in the First Year

Understanding Baby Milestones

Every baby develops at their own pace, and there’s a wide range of “normal.” Use these milestones as general guidelines, not strict deadlines.

Remember: Premature babies may reach milestones based on their adjusted age (due date, not birth date).

Newborn (0-1 Month)

Physical Development

  • Reflexes: Strong rooting, sucking, grasping reflexes
  • Movement: Jerky, uncoordinated movements
  • Head control: Minimal, needs full support
  • Vision: Can see 8-12 inches (your face while feeding!)
  • Hearing: Startles at loud sounds, calms with familiar voices

Social & Emotional

  • Focuses on faces
  • Begins to track objects with eyes
  • Responds to voices
  • First social smiles (around 4-6 weeks)

What You Can Do

  • Tummy time: Start with 2-3 minutes, 2-3 times per day
  • Talk and sing: Helps language development
  • Skin-to-skin: Promotes bonding and regulation
  • High-contrast patterns: Black and white toys

2-3 Months

Physical Development

  • Head control: Holds head up briefly during tummy time
  • Hands: Begins to open and close, brings to mouth
  • Vision: Follows moving objects
  • Kicks: Stronger, more coordinated leg movements
  • Weight: May gain 1.5-2 pounds per month

Social & Emotional

  • Social smiling: Smiles at people spontaneously
  • Cooing: Makes vowel sounds (ooh, aah)
  • Recognition: Knows parent faces and voices
  • Engagement: Looks at you, moves arms excitedly

Cognitive Development

  • Pays attention to faces
  • Follows moving objects with eyes
  • Recognizes familiar people from distance
  • Shows boredom (cries, fusses if activity doesn’t change)

What You Can Do

  • Increase tummy time to 5-10 minutes several times daily
  • Respond to coos with conversation
  • Read books with simple pictures
  • Introduce colorful toys

4-6 Months

Physical Development

  • Rolling: Rolls from tummy to back (4 months), back to tummy (6 months)
  • Sitting: Sits with support (4-5 months), briefly without (6 months)
  • Reaching: Grasps toys deliberately
  • Hand coordination: Transfers objects between hands
  • Sleeping: May sleep 6-8 hour stretches at night

Social & Emotional

  • Laughing: Belly laughs emerge
  • Stranger awareness: May be wary of unfamiliar people
  • Emotional range: Shows joy, frustration, excitement
  • Games: Enjoys peek-a-boo
  • Affection: Shows affection to caregivers

Cognitive Development

  • Explores objects by mouthing
  • Responds to name
  • Recognizes familiar faces
  • Reaches for toys intentionally

Feeding Milestones

  • 4-6 months: May show readiness for solid foods
    • Can hold head steady
    • Opens mouth when food approaches
    • Sits with support
    • Has lost tongue-thrust reflex

What You Can Do

  • More tummy time for strengthening
  • Provide safe toys to explore
  • Play interactive games (peek-a-boo, pat-a-cake)
  • Introduce solid foods when ready (consult pediatrician)

7-9 Months

Physical Development

  • Sitting: Sits independently without support
  • Crawling: Army crawl (7-8 months), hands-and-knees crawl (8-9 months)
  • Standing: Pulls to stand with furniture support
  • Pincer grasp: Picks up small objects with thumb and finger (9 months)
  • Teeth: First teeth may appear (6-10 months is normal range)

Social & Emotional

  • Separation anxiety: Peaks around 8-9 months
  • Stranger anxiety: Clings to familiar caregivers
  • Favorite toys: Shows preferences
  • Imitation: Copies sounds and gestures
  • Attachment: Clear attachment to caregiver

Cognitive Development

  • Object permanence: Understands objects exist when out of sight
  • Cause and effect: Drops toys to see you pick up
  • Memory: Remembers recent events
  • Problem-solving: Figures out how to get desired objects

Language Development

  • Babbling: Combines consonants and vowels (ba-ba, da-da)
  • Understanding: Responds to “no”
  • Gestures: Waves bye-bye
  • Communication: Points at objects

What You Can Do

  • Baby-proof your home (crawling begins!)
  • Encourage crawling with toys just out of reach
  • Play hiding games (object permanence)
  • Read interactive books
  • Narrate daily activities

10-12 Months

Physical Development

  • Standing: Stands alone briefly
  • Cruising: Walks holding furniture
  • First steps: May walk independently (9-15 months is normal)
  • Fine motor: Feeds self finger foods
  • Drinking: Uses sippy cup with help

Social & Emotional

  • Shy or clingy: Around strangers (totally normal)
  • Tests boundaries: Checks your reaction to behaviors
  • Favorite people: Shows preference for certain people
  • Emotions: Range of emotions (happy, sad, frustrated)
  • Cooperation: Helps with dressing (extends arm/leg)

Cognitive Development

  • Finds hidden objects: Even after several layers
  • Uses objects correctly: Drinks from cup, brushes hair
  • Follows simple directions: “Give me the ball”
  • Explores: Investigates how things work

Language Development

  • First words: May say 1-3 words (mama, dada, ball)
  • Understanding: Understands many more words than can say
  • Gestures: Shakes head “no,” waves, points
  • Responds: Responds to simple requests

What You Can Do

  • Provide safe space for exploration
  • Offer toys that encourage problem-solving
  • Read books daily
  • Name objects and body parts
  • Encourage independence in feeding
  • Celebrate attempts at walking

Red Flags: When to Call Your Pediatrician

By 2 Months

If baby:

  • Doesn’t respond to loud sounds
  • Doesn’t watch things as they move
  • Doesn’t smile at people
  • Doesn’t bring hands to mouth
  • Can’t hold head up when pushing up on tummy

By 4 Months

If baby:

  • Doesn’t watch things as they move
  • Doesn’t smile at people
  • Can’t hold head steady
  • Doesn’t coo or make sounds
  • Doesn’t bring things to mouth
  • Doesn’t push down with legs when feet on hard surface

By 6 Months

If baby:

  • Doesn’t try to get things in reach
  • Shows no affection for caregivers
  • Doesn’t respond to sounds
  • Has difficulty getting things to mouth
  • Doesn’t make vowel sounds
  • Doesn’t roll over
  • Doesn’t laugh or make squealing sounds
  • Seems very stiff or very floppy

By 9 Months

If baby:

  • Doesn’t bear weight on legs with support
  • Doesn’t sit with help
  • Doesn’t babble
  • Doesn’t play games like peek-a-boo
  • Doesn’t respond to own name
  • Doesn’t recognize familiar people
  • Doesn’t look where you point
  • Doesn’t transfer toys between hands

By 12 Months

If baby:

  • Doesn’t crawl
  • Can’t stand with support
  • Doesn’t search for hidden objects
  • Doesn’t say single words (“mama” or “dada”)
  • Doesn’t learn gestures (waving, shaking head)
  • Doesn’t point to things
  • Loses skills once had

Loss of Skills at Any Age

Call your pediatrician immediately if your baby loses any skills they once had.

Developmental Tracking Tips

Keep a Baby Journal

Track:

  • New skills and milestones
  • First words
  • Favorite activities
  • Growth measurements
  • Questions for pediatrician

Use the YoyoBaby App

  • Milestone tracker: Record when milestones are reached
  • Photo timeline: Visual record of development
  • Pediatrician reports: Generate milestone summaries for appointments
  • AI insights: Get personalized developmental insights

Well-Child Visits

Schedule:

  • 1 month
  • 2 months
  • 4 months
  • 6 months
  • 9 months
  • 12 months

Bring questions! Write them down as they come up.

Encouraging Development

General Tips

  1. Follow their lead: Observe what interests them
  2. Provide variety: Different textures, sounds, sights
  3. Limit screen time: None before 18 months (AAP recommendation)
  4. Talk constantly: Narrate activities, read books
  5. Play together: Interaction is best for development
  6. Safe exploration: Let them investigate (with supervision)
  7. Celebrate efforts: Not just achievements

Activity Ideas by Age

0-3 months:

  • Tummy time
  • High-contrast books
  • Gentle songs
  • Face-to-face interaction

4-6 months:

  • Rattles and teethers
  • Mirror play
  • Soft books
  • Sitting practice

7-9 months:

  • Crawling obstacles
  • Stacking cups
  • Peek-a-boo
  • Cause-and-effect toys

10-12 months:

  • Push/pull toys
  • Shape sorters
  • Books with flaps
  • Music and dancing

Remember: Every Baby is Unique

Comparison is the thief of joy! Your friend’s baby might walk at 9 months while yours walks at 14 months—both are completely normal.

Focus on:

  • Your baby’s progress, not others’
  • Overall trajectory, not single milestones
  • Engagement and happiness, not just achievements
  • Your instincts—you know your baby best

Celebrate Every Milestone!

Take photos, videos, and notes. These first twelve months fly by, and you’ll treasure these memories forever.

Most importantly: Enjoy this incredible journey of discovery with your little one!


Track your baby’s milestones, growth, and development with YoyoBaby. Our app helps you remember every precious moment and generates reports for pediatrician visits!