What Is the Witching Hour?
The witching hour is a period of increased fussiness and crying that typically occurs in the late afternoon or evening, usually between 5 PM and midnight. Despite the name, it often lasts 2-3 hours.
Almost every baby goes through this. It typically:
- Starts around 2-3 weeks of age
- Peaks around 6-8 weeks
- Gradually decreases by 3-4 months
- Happens around the same time each day
If your baby is doing this, congratulations—you have a normal baby.
Why It Happens
No one knows for certain, but the leading theories:
Overstimulation: By evening, baby has accumulated a full day of sensory input their immature nervous system is struggling to process. The crying is a release valve.
Cumulative tiredness: Despite sleeping most of the day, newborns don't get enough deep, restorative sleep. By evening, fatigue compounds.
Digestive development: The gut is still maturing. Gas, reflux, and general digestive discomfort tend to peak in evenings.
Circadian rhythm development: The fussiness may be part of the process of developing day/night recognition.
Mom's milk changes: Evening breast milk has different composition than morning milk. Some babies react to this.
What It's NOT
Before you spiral into worry:
- It's not colic (unless crying exceeds 3 hours/day, 3+ days/week, for 3+ weeks)
- It's not something you're doing wrong
- It's not a sign of a bigger problem (assuming normal weight gain and wet diapers)
- It's not forever (peaks around 6 weeks, improves by 3 months)
Survival Strategies
The 5 S's (Harvey Karp Method)
These work because they recreate womb conditions:
- Swaddle: Snug wrapping mimics the tight womb space
- Side/Stomach: Hold baby on their side or stomach (NOT for sleeping—just holding)
- Shush: Loud white noise, louder than you think (womb was noisy)
- Swing: Rhythmic motion, supporting head
- Suck: Pacifier, finger, or nursing
The key is doing these SIMULTANEOUSLY and with enough intensity. A gentle rock with quiet shushing won't cut it during peak fussiness.
Environmental Reset
Reduce stimulation:
- Dim all lights
- Turn off TV/music
- Minimize visitors during peak hours
- Keep voices low
Change of scenery:
- Move to a different room
- Go outside (fresh air works surprisingly well)
- Take a car ride
- Walk with carrier or stroller
Movement That Works
- Baby wearing: Carrier or wrap keeps baby close and moving with you
- Exercise ball bouncing: Sit on ball and bounce gently while holding baby
- Stair walking: The rhythm and motion of climbing stairs can work when nothing else does
- The "colic hold": Baby face-down along your forearm, head in your hand
Sound Options
- White noise machine (or app) on HIGH
- Running water (bathroom with shower on)
- Vacuum cleaner
- Dryer with shoes inside
- Deep "shhhh" sound directly in ear
Dad's Secret Weapon: Take Over Completely
Here's the thing—sometimes baby needs someone who isn't mom. Mom smells like milk, which can make a hungry-but-not-hungry baby more frustrated.
From 5 PM to 8 PM (or whenever your witching hour hits):
- You take baby completely
- Mom goes to another floor/room
- You walk, bounce, shush, and manage
- She gets a break before the night shift begins
This isn't about you being better at soothing—it's about giving baby and mom a reset.
What to Expect Week by Week
Weeks 2-3: Witching hour starts appearing Weeks 4-6: Intensity increases, peaks around week 6 Weeks 6-8: Still intense but you're better at managing it Weeks 8-12: Gradual improvement, earlier bedtimes emerge By month 3-4: Witching hour fades, replaced by actual evening routine
Coping for Parents
Before the witching hour:
- Eat dinner early (you won't be able to later)
- Lower expectations for evening productivity
- Text friends/family that you're unavailable 5-9 PM
- Prep bottles or pump in advance
During:
- Take turns in 20-30 minute shifts
- It's okay to put baby down safely and step away for 2 minutes
- Noise-canceling headphones while holding baby are legitimate
- Remind yourself: this is temporary
After (once baby finally sleeps):
- Resist the urge to "finally get stuff done"
- Go to bed. You'll be up in a few hours.
When to Call the Doctor
The witching hour is normal, but call if:
- Crying is accompanied by fever
- Baby refuses to eat for multiple feeds
- Crying is different—higher pitched, pained, inconsolable for 3+ hours
- You notice blood in stool or projectile vomiting
- Baby seems lethargic between crying episodes
- You're at your breaking point (this is a valid reason to call)
The Silver Lining
The witching hour, as awful as it is, may actually serve a purpose. The extended evening wakefulness might help babies consolidate sleep later at night. Many parents notice that babies with intense witching hours often develop better nighttime sleep patterns earlier.
And one day—usually around 3 months—you'll realize it just... stopped. Evening becomes manageable. Bedtime becomes possible. And you'll have survived one of the hardest phases of newborn life.
Sources
- Pediatrics Journal - Infant Crying Patterns
- Dr. Harvey Karp - The Happiest Baby on the Block
- American Academy of Pediatrics - Responding to Baby Cries
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