Yes, both parents can sleep when a baby sleeps only after the baby is flat on their back in a clear crib or bassinet nearby.
The tired-parent advice to “sleep when the baby sleeps” sounds simple. Real life is messier. Newborns wake often, feeds blur into naps, and two adults may wonder if both can drift off at the same time without putting the baby at risk.
The answer is yes, but only when the baby is in a separate sleep space made for infant sleep. That means a crib, bassinet, or play yard with a firm, flat mattress and a fitted sheet. No pillows. No loose blankets. No cuddling on a sofa and no falling asleep with the baby on an adult bed.
That distinction matters. Parents need rest. Newborns need safe sleep. You do not have to choose one or the other. You do need a setup that lets both happen at once.
Why This Question Matters In The First Six Weeks
Newborn sleep comes in short bursts. Many babies sleep 14 to 17 hours across a day, yet that sleep is chopped into brief stretches. Parents often feel wrung out by the second night. By the second week, the fog can be even heavier.
When both adults are worn down, it is easy to bend the rules “just this once.” A baby dozes on a chest after a feed. One parent says they will stay awake. Then both nod off. That is the moment families are trying to avoid when they ask this question.
So the real issue is not whether parents may sleep. It is whether the baby is already in a sleep space that stays safe after the adults close their eyes.
Can Both Parents Sleep While Newborn Sleeps? Only With A Separate Sleep Space
If your newborn is asleep in a bassinet, crib, or play yard beside your bed, both parents can sleep too. If the baby is on either parent, in an adult bed, on a sofa, in a recliner, or tucked into cushions, both parents should not sleep.
That rule stays the same for daytime naps and night sleep. A short nap on the couch can turn risky as fast as a midnight feed. Safe sleep does not start at 8 p.m. It starts every time a baby is put down to sleep.
What “Safe Enough For Parents To Sleep” Looks Like
- Baby is on their back for every sleep.
- Baby is in a crib, bassinet, or play yard made for infant sleep.
- The mattress is firm and flat.
- The sheet is fitted and tight.
- The sleep space is empty except for the baby.
- The baby is in the same room, not in the same bed.
- No parent is feeding or holding the baby when drifting off.
That last point catches many families. A baby may settle fastest on a parent’s chest after feeding. It feels calm and close. Still, if you think sleep may hit you in the next minute, place the baby back in the bassinet first.
What Makes A Setup Unsafe Fast
Adult beds, sofas, armchairs, loungers, nests, pillows, and rolled blankets all add soft surfaces or gaps. A newborn cannot move well enough to get out of trouble. Heat can build up. Airflow can be blocked. The baby can slump into a bad position without making much noise.
That is why safe sleep advice sounds strict. It is built around the moments when adults are tired, not the moments when adults feel fully alert and in control.
Taking Turns Works Better Than “We’ll Just Stay Awake”
Families usually do best with a simple handoff plan. One parent handles the feed or change. The other gets a full sleep block. Then they swap. This works better than two adults sitting up, half-awake, both trying to watch the baby.
A rough rhythm helps:
- Feed the baby.
- Burp and change if needed.
- Lay the baby back in the bassinet or crib while still drowsy or fully asleep.
- Then both parents sleep, or one sleeps while the other resets bottles, pump parts, or laundry.
The aim is not a perfect schedule. The aim is fewer risky “accidental sleep” moments.
| Situation | Can Both Parents Sleep? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Baby asleep in a bassinet beside the bed | Yes | Separate, flat sleep space made for infants |
| Baby asleep in a crib in the parents’ room | Yes | Back sleeping in a clear crib fits safe-sleep advice |
| Baby asleep on one parent’s chest in bed | No | Adult sleep can lead to rolling, slumping, or blocked airflow |
| Baby asleep between parents in an adult bed | No | Soft bedding, pillows, and body movement raise risk |
| Baby asleep on a sofa with a parent | No | Sofas and armchairs are among the riskiest places for infant sleep |
| Baby asleep in a car seat after coming home | No | Move the baby to a flat sleep space once the ride is over |
| Baby asleep in a swing or bouncer | No | Those seats are not meant for routine unsupervised sleep |
| Baby swaddled in a bare bassinet, on their back | Yes, with care | Only if swaddling is done right and stopped once rolling starts |
What Official Safe Sleep Advice Says
The American Academy of Pediatrics says babies should sleep on their backs, on a firm flat surface, in their own sleep space, with no other people in that space. Their parent-facing page on safe sleep guidance also backs room-sharing without bed-sharing.
The NHS gives the same core message: for the first six months, the safest place for a baby to sleep is in a cot or crib in the same room as the parent. Their safer sleep advice for babies also says to put the baby back in the cot before you go to sleep.
CDC guidance lines up with that advice and warns against sleep on couches, armchairs, and other soft surfaces. Their page on helping babies sleep safely is plain on this point: adults can cut risk by making every sleep a safe sleep.
Room Sharing Versus Bed Sharing
This is where many tired parents get tripped up. Room sharing means your baby sleeps in your room, close to your bed, but on a separate sleep surface. Bed sharing means the baby is on the same mattress as an adult. Those are not the same thing.
Room sharing makes night feeds easier. You can hear the baby fast, settle them fast, and put them back down fast. Bed sharing may feel easier in the moment, yet it adds hazards that do not exist in a crib or bassinet.
When The Risk Climbs Even More
- One or both parents smoke
- One or both have taken alcohol, sedatives, or drugs that make waking harder
- The baby was born early or at a low birth weight
- The sleep spot is a sofa, armchair, recliner, or soft bed
- There are pillows, duvets, comforters, or loose blankets near the baby
If any of those are in the picture, a separate bassinet or crib is not just the safer pick. It is the clear call.
| Common Parent Move | Safer Swap | Why The Swap Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Feeding the baby in bed when you are fading | Feed in a chair, then place baby back in bassinet before sleep hits | Reduces the odds of unplanned bed sharing |
| Letting the baby nap in a swing | Move baby to a flat crib or bassinet once asleep | Keeps the airway position steadier |
| Using blankets to “keep baby cozy” | Dress baby in a sleep sack or fitted layers | Keeps loose bedding out of the sleep space |
| Both parents staying up to watch the baby | Use short shifts and sleep while baby is in a safe sleep spot | Gives adults real rest with less risk |
| Leaving baby in a car seat after a ride | Transfer to crib or bassinet right away | Routine sleep should happen on a flat surface |
How To Make Nights Safer And Easier
Set the room before the hard part starts. Place the bassinet close enough that either parent can reach it without fully getting up. Keep diapers, wipes, burp cloths, and a dim light within arm’s reach. The less fumbling at 3 a.m., the better.
Then use a simple rule: if an adult feels sleep creeping in, the baby goes back into the bassinet. Not in five minutes. Not after one more scroll on the phone. Right then.
Good Habits That Pay Off Fast
- Put the baby down on their back for every nap and night sleep.
- Keep the sleep space bare.
- Use a pacifier at sleep time if feeding is going well and your baby accepts one.
- Share night duties in blocks when possible.
- Ask a trusted adult to handle one feed or one baby shift so each parent gets one longer sleep stretch.
If you ever wake and find the baby in your bed after a feed, move the baby back to the bassinet right away. Then think about what led to that moment. Was the feed happening in bed? Was one parent far more tired than expected? Small fixes can lower the chance of a repeat the next night.
When To Call Your Baby’s Clinician
Reach out if your baby has breathing pauses, repeated blue spells, poor feeding, fever, weak wakefulness, or sleepiness that feels out of step with normal newborn patterns. Also call if your baby was born early or has a health condition and you are unsure whether any sleep advice needs to be adjusted for your case.
And if either parent is so tired that staying awake during feeds feels nearly impossible, talk with a clinician and lean on family help if you have it. Exhaustion can push people into risky sleep setups even when they know the rules.
A Simple Rule To Carry Through The Newborn Stage
Both parents can sleep while a newborn sleeps when the baby is sleeping alone, on their back, in a flat, clear bassinet or crib in the same room. If the baby is on a parent, in an adult bed, or on a sofa, adults should not sleep too.
That one rule clears up most of the confusion. It also gives tired parents something they badly need: a way to rest without guessing.
References & Sources
- American Academy of Pediatrics.“How to Keep Your Sleeping Baby Safe: AAP Policy Explained.”Sets out back sleeping, room sharing without bed sharing, and the need for a firm, flat, separate infant sleep space.
- NHS.“Baby Safer Sleep Advice.”States that the safest place for a baby in the first six months is a cot in the same room as the parent and says to return the baby to the cot before the parent sleeps.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.“Providing Care for Babies to Sleep Safely.”Explains steps that lower the risk of sleep-related infant death, including avoiding couches, armchairs, and other unsafe sleep spots.
