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Baby Overheating at Night: Signs, Risks, and How to Fix It

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Toddler sleeping too warmly with flushed cheeks and heavy bedding

One of the most common things new parents do - with the best intentions - is overdress their baby for sleep. Extra layers, a thick duvet, a warm room. The instinct to keep them warm is natural.

But overheating is a real risk. And in the early months, it's one that deserves serious attention.

Toddler sleeping too warmly with flushed cheeks and heavy bedding

What the Research Says

Overheating has been identified as a risk factor for disrupted sleep and, in infants under 12 months, is associated with increased SIDS risk. The safest sleep temperature for babies and toddlers is 18–20°C (65–68°F) - cooler than most parents expect.

At these temperatures, appropriate clothing and a single layer of breathable bedding (for toddlers 18 months+) is sufficient. The goal is comfortable warmth, not maximum warmth.

Signs Your Baby or Toddler Is Overheating

During sleep:

  • Sweating - especially around the neck, hairline, and back
  • Flushed or red cheeks
  • Rapid breathing
  • Damp hair or clothing on waking
  • Unusually frequent night waking (often misread as hunger or behavioral)

What overheating doesn't always look like:
It's not always dramatic. Mild overheating - just enough to disrupt sleep cycles - often shows up as “bad sleep” without obvious symptoms.

The chest test:
The most reliable way to check if your baby is too warm is to feel their chest or the back of their neck - not their hands or feet, which are naturally cooler. If their chest is warm and sweaty, they're too hot.

Parent gently checking a baby’s neck or chest temperature during sleep

Common Causes of Nighttime Overheating

1. Too many layers
A room-temperature vest + sleepsuit + thick sleep sack + duvet is almost always too much. Each layer adds trapped heat.

2. Synthetic bedding
Polyester and synthetic down don't breathe. They create a sealed warm pocket that can't release heat as the child's body temperature rises through the night.

3. Room temperature too high
Many families keep bedrooms at 22–24°C, especially in winter. This is too warm for safe infant sleep.

4. Seasonal mismatch
Using a winter-weight duvet into spring and summer. Children's temperature needs change with the season - bedding should too.

Thick synthetic bedding looking stuffy in a child’s room

The Fix: Temperature-Smart Bedding

The most effective solution isn't just reducing layers - it's choosing materials that actively regulate temperature rather than passively trapping heat.

Mulberry silk is the most temperature-responsive natural fiber. It absorbs excess body heat and releases it through the duvet, rather than reflecting it back onto the sleeper. This means your child stays in a narrower, more comfortable temperature range through the night - without you adjusting the thermostat at 3am.

For toddlers (18 months+): a lightweight silk duvet in a room kept at 18–20°C, with a single cotton layer underneath, is the ideal setup for most Canadian seasons.

Breathable sleepwear and a lightweight duvet layered on a toddler bed

A Note on Room Temperature in Canada

Canadian winters mean heating systems run hard. Many bedrooms reach 22–24°C overnight without parents realizing it. A simple room thermometer (under $15) is one of the most useful baby sleep tools you can own.

Room thermometer near 19°C in a calm nursery with breathable bedding

Cool, calm nursery with a toddler sleeping comfortably under light bedding


alanunu silk duvets are designed to regulate temperature naturally - keeping toddlers comfortable through the night without overheating. Learn more →

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