Tummy time is one of those things every parent hears about but few truly understand. It sounds simple — flip the baby onto their tummy, done. But done right, it is one of the most powerful developmental tools in your first year.
What is tummy time and why does it matter?
Tummy time means placing your baby on their stomach while they are awake and supervised. It sounds basic. The impact is anything but.
Since the 1990s “Back to Sleep” campaign (which successfully reduced SIDS rates), babies spend most of their waking time on their backs. This is safe — but it means the muscles that develop through pressure and gravity on the front of the body get far less natural stimulus.
Without tummy time, babies develop:
- Weaker neck, shoulder, and core muscles
- Flat head spots (positional plagiocephaly)
- Delays in rolling, sitting, crawling, and standing
With regular tummy time, they build the entire muscular foundation for every gross motor milestone that follows.
When to start
Start from day one home from the hospital. Even a few minutes across your chest counts.
The earlier you start, the more natural it becomes. Babies who start tummy time from the first week rarely “hate” it — it is the babies introduced at 6 weeks who fight it, because it feels foreign and hard.
How much tummy time per day
By 2 months: work up to 30 minutes total per day (in short sessions) By 4 months: 60+ minutes spread across the day By 6 months: as much as possible during all awake time
Start with 2–3 minute sessions right after a nappy change, when the baby is content and not hungry.
How to do tummy time (step by step)
Position 1: On your chest (newborn favourite) Lie back at a 30–45° angle. Place baby chest-to-chest. This position uses gravity to encourage lifting the head — and most newborns will raise their head instinctively to see your face.
Position 2: On a firm, flat surface Floor is best (not the sofa — babies roll). A play mat or blanket on the floor. Place baby face-down with arms in front, elbows under or slightly in front of shoulders.
Position 3: The football carry Hold baby face-down across your forearm, their head at your elbow, your hand between their legs. Walk around. Baby gets tummy time and a change of scenery.
Position 4: Across your lap Sit upright, baby face-down across your thighs. Rub their back, talk to them.
What to do during tummy time
Get down at their level. Your face is the most interesting thing in their world.
- Make eye contact and talk — they will strain to see you
- Use a high-contrast black-and-white card at 20–30cm distance (newborn vision range)
- Place a favourite toy just out of reach (from 4 months)
- Use a mirror — babies are fascinated by faces, including their own
- Sing songs — the rhythm keeps them calm
My baby hates tummy time — what now?
Almost every parent says this. Here is what actually works:
1. Start shorter. Thirty seconds of content tummy time beats two minutes of screaming. End before the crying starts. Build up slowly.
2. Use the chest position. It is gentler and feels more secure.
3. Try after a nappy change. Babies are often in a calm, neutral state then.
4. Roll a small towel under the chest. Just under the collarbone. It reduces the effort to lift the head and makes the position easier.
5. Get on the floor with them. Your face is motivation enough.
6. Time it right. Never right after a feed (uncomfortable), never when tired. The sweet spot is 20–30 minutes after a feed.
Red flags to watch for
These are not emergencies but worth discussing with your paediatrician:
- Baby consistently turns head to one side only (torticollis)
- No head lifting at all by 3 months
- Clear preference for one side, asymmetrical movement
Want a week-by-week play programme with tummy time built into every session? Our Play by Age Guide covers the first three years with activities designed by early childhood specialists.
See also: Baby Speech & Language Development | Developmental Milestones 0–12 Months