You can start from day one. This guide helps you build a calm reading routine that fits real life.
If you are tired and short on time, you are not behind. Reading together can be simple: a few pages, your familiar voice, and one cozy minute of connection.
You can start from day one. Newborns do not follow stories yet, but they listen to rhythm, tone, and pauses in your voice.
At this stage, reading is less about finishing a book and more about shared attention: your voice, your face, and a calm moment together.
If you are wondering what to read to your baby and how to read to a newborn, keep it simple. Choose short board books, high-contrast images, or gentle rhymes. Point to one picture, name it, and pause so your little one can look, coo, or move.
Around 6 to 12 months, babies often reach, pat, and turn pages with help. Let them lead. Repeating favorite books is useful because familiar sounds and words can support early language learning.
What reading together can look like as your child grows
Watches your face, listens to your voice, and settles with steady rhythm.
Reaches for books, babbles while you read, and enjoys textured pages.
Turns pages with help, points to pictures, and starts recognizing familiar words.
Brings books to you, finishes repeated phrases, and asks for favorites.
Names pictures, predicts what comes next, and retells simple parts in their own words.
Regular read-aloud time can support early language, listening, and memory skills. Babies hear repeated sounds and words, which helps them build familiarity over time.
Reading also supports emotional connection. Sitting close and sharing attention can help your baby associate books with comfort, safety, and calm.
One of the biggest benefits of reading to babies is routine. A short story before sleep can become a predictable bedtime cue, especially during busy weeks when everything else feels less predictable.
Reading together may also build early pre-literacy habits. Looking at pictures, pointing, naming objects, and turning pages can all help your little one understand how books work.
Aim for 5 to 10 minutes on most days. If your baby is fussy, one short book is enough. Short, regular sessions are easier to keep.
Try attaching reading to routines you already have, like after bath or before sleep. A predictable rhythm makes reading feel natural.
If daily reading feels hard, split it into tiny moments: two minutes after a feed, a quick book during tummy time, and one story before bed. It all counts.
Many parents ask how often they should read to a baby. A simple goal is regular exposure to books and your voice through the week. Reading once a day is a great goal, then build a steady bedtime reading routine when it fits your home.
Join Little Dino as he says goodnight to all his dinosaur friends. A gentle story to help little ones drift off to sleep.
Start reading together