Baby and toddler feeding guide: common problems and what helps

If your baby refuses solids, your toddler only wants bread, or every meal feels like a negotiation — you're not alone, and you're almost certainly not failing.

The short version:

Quick reference: feeding by age

AgeWhat to expect
6–8 monthsExploring, not really "eating". Gagging normal. Milk still the main source (NHS)
8–12 monthsIncreasing interest, finger foods. Texture variety matters
12–18 monthsAppetite drops as growth slows. Pickiness may start
18–24 monthsPeak pickiness. Strong "no" to new foods
2–3 yearsGradual expansion if you stay consistent
Milk after 12 months400–500 ml / 16–18 oz per day cap helps appetite (AAP)

This guide is the deep-dive pillar — for specific challenges (picky eating, food refusal, solids refusal), see the linked articles below.

Why feeding gets harder after the first year

Four things stack up, and once you can name them, the meals feel less personal.

1. Growth slows dramatically. A baby triples birth weight in 12 months. A toddler gains a fraction of that in the next year. Their bodies genuinely need less fuel — and their appetite drops to match. Most "they're not eating enough" worries are actually a normal calibration.

2. Neophobia kicks in. Between roughly 18 months and 3 years, children develop an instinctive wariness of unfamiliar foods. It's evolutionary protection (an early human toddler eating any berry was a dead toddler), not defiance.

3. Autonomy explodes. Toddlers need to feel control over their world. Food is one of the very few areas where they have real veto power. A "no" to broccoli is often less about broccoli and more about practicing self-determination (WHO — Infant and young child feeding).

4. Sensory wiring differs. Some children are genuinely more sensitive to textures, temperatures, and flavors. This is neurological, not behavioral, and it's why "just one bite" feels much harder for some kids than others.

Starting solids (6–12 months)

What's normal

What helps

For more on the most common 8-month wall, see baby refusing solids at 8 months.

Toddler feeding (12–36 months)

Why toddlers go "picky"

Pickiness usually peaks between 18 and 24 months. That overlap is not coincidence — it's the season where:

Knowing that, "she only wants bread" looks less like a problem and more like a phase you can steer through.

The division of responsibility

This framework (originally Ellyn Satter's, widely backed by pediatric nutrition guidance) is the single most useful thing for tense mealtimes:

Parent decides:
- what food is offered
- when meals and snacks happen
- where eating occurs

Child decides:
- whether to eat
- how much to eat

It looks permissive but isn't — you keep control over the variables that matter (nutrition, structure, environment) and stop fighting over the ones you can't actually control (how much enters the child's mouth).

Practical strategies that work

If you're worried specifically about a child who eats almost nothing day after day, see baby not eating much: when to worry, what to do.

What doesn't work (and why it backfires)

For tantrum-flavored refusal specifically, toddler refuses food: what to do walks through the playbook.

Sleep, mood, and feeding (the hidden link)

Tired toddlers eat worse. Hungry toddlers melt down sooner. The two systems feed each other. If meals have been chaotic for a week, check sleep first — a short-nap streak often shows up as picky days the same week. See how much should a toddler eat for realistic portions and signs your baby is overtired for the sleep angle.

When to seek help

Most feeding challenges resolve with time and consistency. Talk to your pediatrician if any of these apply:

Pediatric feeding therapists, occupational therapists, and dietitians exist for exactly this. Early support is help, not failure.

Frequently asked questions

My baby gags on everything — is that normal?
Yes. Gagging is a protective reflex when starting solids; the baby is actively moving air. Choking is silent and requires immediate action. They look similar but are not the same.

My toddler only wants milk — should I limit it?
Yes. Too much milk reduces appetite for solids. After 12 months, ~400–500 ml (16–18 oz) per day is usually enough; more than that often crowds out food.

Is it okay if my toddler eats the same thing every day?
Short-term, yes. Keep offering variety alongside the preferred foods — the goal is exposure, not forced acceptance. Most families need to ride this out for weeks, not days.

When does pickiness usually improve?
Typically around age 3–4, though some children take longer. Consistency in your approach matters more than the calendar.

How much should a toddler actually eat?
Less than you'd guess. A tablespoon per year of age is a reasonable serving. Daily intake varies wildly day to day; week-over-week trend is the real signal.

My toddler refuses dinner but eats breakfast — is something wrong?
Almost certainly not. Toddler appetite is heavily front-loaded — many eat their best meal of the day at breakfast or lunch and barely touch dinner. As long as the week looks balanced, the day looking lopsided is fine.

How KidyGrow can help

KidyGrow learns your child as you log meals, mood, sleep, and routines — and shows the connections a static chart can't. Most feeding "problems" turn out to be patterns: short-nap days break dinners, missed snacks turn into 4 p.m. meltdowns, the second molar quietly shrinks every appetite for a week. The hard part isn't the meal; it's noticing the link.

The Daily Brief surfaces those patterns in a few days — because the app remembers the small notes you'd otherwise forget (Wednesday's calm broccoli moment, last Tuesday's dinner refusal after a 30-minute nap) and ties them together. The plan is personalized to your child's last week, not a generic feeding chart. Calibration usually takes 3–5 days of regular logging; the longer you use it, the sharper the picture.

For the specific picky-eating playbook, see picky eating in children: help without pressure.

_This content is educational and does not replace professional nutritional or medical advice. For any concern about your child's growth or feeding, talk to your pediatrician or a registered dietitian._

Sources

  1. American Academy of Pediatrics — Toddler Nutrition (accessed 2026).
  2. AAP HealthyChildren — Baby Feeding and Nutrition (accessed 2026).
  3. NHS — Weaning (Start for Life) (accessed 2026).
  4. NHS — Weaning and feeding (accessed 2026).
  5. WHO — Infant and young child feeding (accessed 2026).