Bedtime snacks for kids can be part of a healthy toddler bedtime routine that helps the kids wind down, fill their bellies, and be ready for a good night of sleep. Here’s how to choose one, how to know if your child needs one, and more tips on healthy toddler sleep.
Bedtime Snacks
Incorporating a bedtime snack for kids into your toddler’s nightly routine can be an easy way to ensure they’ve had enough to eat, help them settle down for bed, and can fill in any nutritional needs they might have missed during the day. To me, bedtime snacks aren’t always necessary—especially if you go right from dinner into bath and the bedtime routine with little time for them to work up an appetite—but they can be a great option if your child regularly says they’re hungry before bed.
And they can help remove the constant negotiations that can happen when a child regularly says they’re hungry right before bed, which is easier for everyone.
(You may also like Shortcut Toddler Meals, Baby Snacks, Preschool Snacks, and 5-Minute After School Snacks.)
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Toddler Bedtime Routine
Taking some time to think through your toddler’s bedtime routine and how you may include a bedtime snack can be a great thing to do ahead of time—and I’m talking like 5 minutes of thinking, not a giant project! In our house, our routine looks like this for all of our kids:
- Bath (some nights)
- PJs
- Bedtime snack (some nights)
- Brush teeth
- Books
- Song
- Lights out and good night
TIP: We’ve tried to do the same bedtime routine from the time our kids were babies so they knew what to expect even as things like breastfeeding and cribs changed. We even made up a bedtime song where we sing goodnight to all of our family members which is the final cue before bed.
How to Choose Bedtime Snacks
My best advice when deciding what to offer for a bedtime snack for kids is to choose something fairly boring that the kids like fine but probably wouldn’t ask for on their own. I’ve found that it’s really helpful to make the snack option always be the same thing to cut down on bedtime stalling and to make it easier for you to know if the kids are really hungry.
In my house, if a child says they’re hungry when we say it’s time for bed it’s “You can have a banana or be hungry for breakfast.” If they choose the banana, it’s easy to eat and will fill their bellies. They probably won’t choose it if they aren’t truly hungry.
We almost always have bananas, which is why we use that option. At other times, we’ve also gone with cheese sticks.
Best Bedtime Snacks for Kids
There are lots of other foods that work well as a bedtime snack to help promote sleepiness and take care of any cries of “I’m hungry” as bed time rolls around. All of these snacks hit on the main food groups little kids need each day, so they can fill in any nutritional gaps. But they are also straightforward, low on the fun food scale, and easy to eat.
1.Applesauce pouch
An applesauce pouch, either store-bought or in a reusable pouch, can be a straightforward and simple bedtime snack.
2. Banana
You already know this is my favorite, and it’s nice because it boasts magnesium and potassium, which can help with sleep a little, too.
3. Banana Yogurt
My son goes through food really quickly and often needs a heartier bedtime snack. I like to give him a mix of fruit, fat, and protein, and this super Easy Banana Yogurt is one of his current favorites.
4. Berries
A bowl of berries can be comforting and delicious, and it gives a nice dose of vitamins and fiber.
5. Cheese stick
With protein and calcium and a yummy flavor, a plain old cheese stick is an easy bedtime snack that’s filling for little bellies.
6. Dry Cereal
Pick your favorite healthy cereal for kids and let that be a simple bedtime snack with or without a small serving of milk.
7. Granola Bar
Whether you prefer store-bought or homemade granola bars, a granola bar or snack bar can be a nice source of calming complex carbohydrates to satisfy the kids’ hunger.
8. Hard-cooked Egg
If you have a few hard-cooked eggs on hand, you can serve one up as a protein-packed snack. This is also a great example of a bedtime snack with a food that the kids might like fine but would probably never request at snack time on their own—so you know they’re actually hungry if they want it!
9. Mini Bagel and Cream Cheese
With complex carbohydrates and protein, this simple kids snack is great anytime of the day, but it’s particularly comforting right before bed.
10. Peanut Butter Toast
A simple slice of toast, cut into sticks or cubed for easy toddler chewing, is a healthy snack to serve before bed. Top with nut or seed butter and jam like Blueberry Chia Jam.
11. Whole Grain Crackers and Cheese
A few crackers and a slice of cheese is a simple snack to offer right before bed.
12. Whole Grain Muffin
If you have a healthy muffins for kids in the fridge or freezer, you can offer one (or half of one) as a bedtime snack. Easy and yummy!
How do I know if I my child is hungry or just stalling bedtime?
There’s no magic way to know that, which is why I recommend not making the bedtime snack options too exciting. This reduces the chances the kids will use that as a stalling tactic and avoids the potential of them skipping their dinner to hold out for their favorite snack. So keep any bedtime snack simple, fairly boring, and not their favorite food, and you can at least have a pretty good idea of whether your child is hungry or not. They may still try to stall bedtime, though!
Can melatonin help with toddler sleep?
For a period of time, my middle kiddo had a VERY hard time winding down for bed. On days when she had a random late nap or was otherwise having a hard time settling down, we turn to what we call “sleep vitamins,” or gummies with melatonin, as part of our bedtime routine. It was originally recommended to me by a friend, so I did some research and found that this supplement can occasionally help kids get a good night of sleep.
It’s not meant to be used regularly, but it’s proven to be a helpful tool in our nighttime tool kit for those sporadic rough nights. (Again, we did this for a brief period of time when bedtime was otherwise a disaster, and melatonin was useful.)
TIP: Read more on melatonin and kids from the American Academy of Pediatrics and as with all supplements, talk to your pediatrician before using with your kids.
Best Tips for Kids Bedtime Snacks
- Keep the food simple and straightforward and not their favorite food to help you know if the child is actually hungry.
- If there’s regularly more than 90 minutes between dinner and bedtime, it’s possible your child will need a snack before bed.
- Choose one or two options for bedtime snacks in your house so you know exactly what to offer if the subject comes up—and you can avoid a lengthy negotiation over foods the kids can have.
- Try “you can have a banana or be hungry for breakfast.” (Insert whichever food you are using if it’s not a banana!)
- Include two food groups if your child is regularly really hungry by bedtime, such as protein and/or fat to keep those bellies full.
Related Recipes
I’d love to hear any questions you have on bedtime snacks, so please comment below to share!
12 Easy Bedtime Snacks for Kids
Ingredients
- 1 applesauce pouch (homemade in a reusable pouch or store bought)
- 1 banana
- 1/2-1 cup Banana Yogurt
- 1/2-1 cup berries (like blueberries or diced strawberries)
- 1 cheese stick (whole or cut up)
- 1/2-1 cup dry cereal (such as O's, Chex, or Kix)
- 1 granola bar
- 1 hard-cooked egg
- 1 mini bagel and cream cheese
- 1 silce peanut butter toast
- 1/2 cup whole grain crackers and cheese
- 1 whole grain muffin
Instructions
- Choose one bedtime snack or choose two and let the child pick.
- Serve without distractions, then brush teeth and continue with the bedtime routine.
Notes
- Keep the food simple and straightforward and not their favorite food to help you know if the child is actually hungry.
- If there’s regularly more than 90 minutes between dinner and bedtime, it’s possible your child will need a snack before bed.
- Choose one or two options for bedtime snacks in your house so you know exactly what to offer if the subject comes up—and you can avoid a lengthy negotiation over foods the kids can have.
- Try “you can have a banana or be hungry for breakfast.” (Insert whichever food you are using if it’s not a banana!)
- Include two food groups if your child is regularly really hungry by bedtime, including protein and/or fat to keep those bellies full.
Nutrition
This post was first published December 2020.
I read somewhere that if you offer a bedtime snack once, you should always do it. Do you suggest offering bedtime snack every night?
It’s up to you, but having one bedtime snack option can be helpful if this has become a daily negotiation because then everyone knows the option and it’s built into the routine.
Do you take the kids back down to the kitchen once they have their pajamas on or do they eat the snack in their bedroom? I want to try a snack, but don’t want to undo the efforts of winding down by going back to the kitchen.
We have bananas upstairs in their pjs, then we brush teeth. They usually eat it while we read so it doesn’t add time to the routine
Any recommendations for kids that are allergic to bananas and eggs? My 2 1/2 year-old just recently started waking up in the middle of the night saying she’s hungry and we were giving her pouches on the occasion she would wake up hungry but they don’t seem to be filling her up anymore so we are at a loss for what to give her when we’re half awake in the middle of the night ðŸ˜
Cheese, yogurt pouch, half a Larabar. Maybe see if you can move it to right before bed though since I imagine this is very tiring!
Hi you say ‘If there’s regularly more than 90 minutes between dinner and bedtime, it’s possible your child will need a snack before bed.’ would it be possible to share the research behind this please? I’m interested to know where this originated.
It’s simply based on knowing that most kids need to eat every 2-3 hours, so if the duration between dinner and bedtime is longer than 90 minutes, they may benefit from a snack before bed. That will of course vary based on the individual kiddo, but it can be helpful to keep in mind if they’re regularly saying they are hungry at bedtime.