Every stage, every week: tips and stories
Potty Training · Night-Time & Bedwetting

5 Things Parents Should Know About Night-Time Potty Training

It’s a different process from daytime training — here’s what actually helped, and when to stop worrying.

✏️ Written by a mum & teacher 📖 5 min read 🇬🇧 UK toddlers

Daytime felt manageable once we found our rhythm. Nights brought a whole new level of doubt.

Night-time potty training with a toddler was the part I felt least prepared for. I remember lying awake listening for movement, wondering if I should lift them for a late wee or just let everyone sleep.

If you’re feeling unsure about night-time potty training, you are not alone. We’ve been through it more than once, and what helped most was understanding that night-time dryness is very different from daytime potty training. Here are five things I wish someone had explained to me sooner.

What you’ll find in this post

  • Why night-time dryness works differently to daytime training
  • When to actually start, and the signs to wait for
  • Simple routine changes that help without adding pressure
  • What’s normal — and when it’s worth speaking to a professional

First: this isn’t something you can rush

Night-time dryness is largely down to physical development — whether your toddler’s body yet produces the hormone that helps them hold urine overnight. No amount of practice or encouragement can speed that up.

If you haven’t already, our complete guide to potty training your toddler covers daytime readiness first — night-time usually follows once that’s settled.

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Night dryness is developmental, not taught

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Daytime confidence usually comes first

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Accidents are normal, not a setback

Some children simply need more time

The 5 things to know

What actually helps at night

Understanding how night-time dryness works makes the whole process far less stressful.

1

point one

Night-time dryness is developmental, not a skill

One of the most common questions parents ask is whether they can train a toddler to stay dry at night. From our experience — and plenty of reassurance from health professionals — night-time dryness is largely down to physical development, not effort.

💡 Some children naturally wake when they need a wee. Others don’t yet produce the hormone that helps them hold urine overnight. Letting go of the idea that accidents meant we were doing something wrong made the biggest difference.
  • Accidents at this stage mean readiness, not effort or behaviour
  • There’s no technique that can speed up the biology
  • Read our complete potty training guide for how daytime readiness fits in first

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point two

Daytime confidence usually comes first

Before night-time potty training became realistic for us, daytime dryness was well established. Trying to tackle nights too early only added pressure.

💡 Waiting until daytime felt settled made everything calmer and gave our child a strong foundation to build on.
  • If daytime accidents are still frequent, pause and focus there first
  • Night-time will come later — there’s no benefit to rushing it
  • Confidence built in the day carries over once nights are ready to start

3

point three

Small routine changes can help without pressure

Gentle routine changes helped support night-time dryness without turning bedtime into a stressful event. Cutting back on drinks about an hour before bed, and making the toilet part of the bedtime routine, became habits over time.

💡 Some families find a late evening toilet visit helpful — often called a “dream wee.” It worked for one of our children and not the other. There’s no right or wrong approach, only what suits your child.
  • Reduce drinks in the hour before bed, not earlier in the evening
  • Build a toilet visit into the bedtime routine itself
  • Keep bedtime calm and predictable — that matters more than any specific technique

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point four

Accidents at night are completely normal

Night-time accidents can feel discouraging, especially if your toddler has been dry for a few nights and then suddenly wets the bed again. This happened to us more than once.

💡 Being prepared helped. Waterproof mattress protectors saved our sanity and let us respond calmly rather than making a big deal of accidents.
  • Use a waterproof mattress protector so accidents are easy, not stressful
  • A few dry nights followed by accidents doesn’t mean failure
  • Focus your reaction on reassurance, not correction

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point five

Some children take much longer, and that’s okay

This is the part I wish more people talked about. Some children stay dry at night early on. Others need much more time, sometimes well into the preschool years.

💡 Using night-time nappies or pull-ups for longer doesn’t undo daytime potty training. For us, it protected our child’s confidence and helped everyone sleep better.
  • Night nappies are a support, not a step backward
  • If your child seems distressed, anxious, or consistently very wet overnight, it’s always okay to speak to your GP or health visitor
  • Most of the time, the answer is simply time

Your child isn’t choosing to wet the bed. Their body just needs more time.

Night-time potty training requires patience, flexibility, and a lot of reassurance — for both your child and you. It’s not a race, and it’s not something you can force.

With support, calm routines, and plenty of reassurance, night-time dryness does eventually come. If you’re in the thick of it right now, you’re doing a wonderful job. Sleep will return, and this phase will pass.

This isn’t your fault. Their body is on its own timeline. Sleep will return.

Frequently asked questions about night-time potty training

Most children are not ready until they are consistently dry during the day. There is no set age, and many toddlers need longer before night-time dryness develops.

Yes. Bedwetting is very common and usually linked to development rather than behaviour or effort.

Some parents find this helpful, while others do not. It is not essential, and it should never disrupt your child’s sleep long term if it causes distress.

No. Night-time nappies can protect confidence and sleep while your child’s body develops the ability to stay dry.

If your child is older, very distressed, or night-time wetting continues alongside other symptoms, it is worth seeking advice from a healthcare professional.

Written by a mum & primary school teacher

Having navigated night-time potty training more than once myself, I write about the practical, honest side of early childhood, because parents deserve real information, not just reassurance.