Baby Development
Your 2-Month-Old Baby
Your 2-month-old: first real social smiles, cooing, 14-16 hours sleep, longer wake windows, the 2-month vaccines, and what milestones to expect this month.
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This article is for general information and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your pediatrician or doctor about your child.
Aligned with AAP, WHO, NHS and CDC guidance.
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At a Glance: Your 2-Month-Old
Month two is when many parents say their baby starts to feel like a person. The newborn fog lifts a little. You see real smiles, hear coos in response to your voice, and notice longer windows of alert engagement. The CDC officially tracks "2 months" as the first formal milestone checkpoint, and your pediatrician will do a thorough developmental review at the 2-month visit. This guide combines AAP, CDC, WHO, and NHS guidance so you know what is typical and what is worth a phone call.
- Weight: ~4.2-6.5 kg (boys), 3.9-6.0 kg (girls); 150-200 g gained per week.
- Length: ~54-60 cm (21-23.5 inches).
- Head circumference: ~37-41 cm — significant brain growth continues.
- Sleep: 14-16 hours total; 3-5 naps; some longer night stretches emerging.
- Feeding: Breastfed 8-10 times/day; formula-fed 120-180 ml every 3-4 hours.
- Wake windows: 60-90 minutes.
- Key milestones: Social smile, cooing, holds head up briefly, follows objects with eyes, calms when spoken to.
Physical Development
Reflexes that dominated month 1 begin to fade, replaced by the very first voluntary movements. The Moro (startle) reflex weakens; the rooting reflex becomes less reliable as feeding becomes more learned than reflexive. Head control is the headline motor milestone of month 2.
Gross motor
- Lifts head about 45 degrees during tummy time and holds for several seconds.
- When held upright, holds head up briefly though it may still bob.
- Kicks legs and moves arms more smoothly; movements are still bilateral and symmetric.
- Some grasp and tonic neck reflexes are weakening.
Fine motor
- Hands are unclenching more often — open hands appear during alert periods.
- Brings hands together near the chest.
- Begins watching their own hands move (the first taste of cause and effect).
- No intentional reaching yet; that emerges around 3-4 months.
Cognitive & Social Development
The social smile that emerges this month is more than cute — it is a major neurological event. It signals that your baby's brain is processing faces and voices and producing a deliberate emotional response. This is the first true two-way social communication.
- Smiles socially in response to faces, voices, and play.
- Follows objects with eyes across the midline (left to right and back).
- Pays attention to faces with longer, more focused gazes.
- Recognizes parents by sight, sound, and smell, and shows preference.
- Calms when picked up, spoken to, or rocked.
- Boredom appears — cries or fusses when activity stops or stimulation is the same for too long.
Respond to your baby's smiles and coos with your own smiles and gentle talk. These "serve and return" exchanges are foundational to brain development, attachment, and later language skills.
Language & Communication
Cooing — those open-vowel "ooh" and "aah" sounds — typically begins between 6 and 8 weeks. Your baby is experimenting with sound production, learning that they can make noise and that you respond to it.
- Coos and gurgles, especially when content.
- Turns head toward voices and other sounds.
- Has different cries for hunger, tiredness, and discomfort.
- Quiets or smiles when spoken to.
- Listens intently to language, music, and household sounds.
Talk constantly. Narrate your day. Sing. Read short, simple board books. The NHS and AAP both emphasize that early language exposure — even one-sided, before the baby can respond — predicts later vocabulary and reading outcomes.
Sleep at 2 Months
Sleep starts to feel slightly more organized this month — though "slightly" is the operative word. Most 2-month-olds still wake at least twice overnight for feeds. The circadian rhythm is beginning to mature, which means longer stretches of night sleep and more recognizable day/night patterns are starting to form.
- Total sleep: 14-16 hours / 24 hours.
- Night sleep: 8-10 hours with 1-3 wakings for feeds; some babies begin a 5-6 hour stretch.
- Naps: 3-5 daytime naps, usually 30-90 minutes each.
- Wake windows: 60-90 minutes.
- Schedule: Day/night confusion is resolving but a strict schedule is not yet realistic.
Safe sleep reminders (AAP): back to sleep, firm flat surface, bare crib or bassinet, room-sharing without bed-sharing through at least 6 months, room temperature 16-20°C / 60-68°F, no swaddling once your baby shows any rolling attempts. Pacifiers at sleep onset are associated with reduced SIDS risk.
Feeding at 2 Months
Your baby is still exclusively on breast milk, formula, or both. The WHO continues to recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months. Do not introduce water, juice, cereal, or any solid foods. Around 6 to 8 weeks is a common growth spurt, when babies feed more often for a day or two — this is normal and helps milk supply keep up.
Breastfeeding
- 8-10 feeds in 24 hours, on demand.
- Feeds may become shorter and more efficient (10-15 minutes total is common).
- Cluster feeding in the evening continues for many babies.
Formula feeding
- 120-180 ml (4-6 oz) every 3-4 hours.
- Total ~600-900 ml (20-30 oz) per day.
- Watch for fullness cues: turning away, slowing sucking, falling asleep. Do not force the bottle to finish.
Continue vitamin D 400 IU/day for breastfed and partially breastfed babies, per AAP guidance.
Play & Activities
Alert periods are longer and more interactive this month. Your baby is ready for more deliberate play, though sessions are still short — typically 5-15 minutes before they need a break or sleep.
- Tummy time: Build to 15-30 minutes total per day, in short bursts.
- Face-to-face talk: Coo back to your baby — these "conversations" build neural pathways.
- High-contrast and slowly moving toys: Help with visual tracking.
- Singing and reading: Repetition and rhythm support language development.
- Gentle leg bicycles and arm stretches: Encourage body awareness during diaper changes.
Health & Safety
The 2-month wellness visit is the first big immunization milestone. Your pediatrician will perform a full developmental review using the CDC milestone checklist and update your baby's growth chart.
- Vaccines (CDC/AAP schedule): DTaP, Hib, IPV (polio), PCV15/PCV20 (pneumococcal), rotavirus (oral), and Hep B (2nd or 3rd dose). Side effects: mild fever, fussiness, sleepiness, and tenderness for 24-48 hours.
- Safe sleep: All the same rules apply. Stop swaddling once any rolling attempts begin.
- Car seat: Still rear-facing; harness snug at armpit level; never in puffy winter coats inside the harness.
- Tummy time: Continues to reduce flat-head risk and build motor strength.
- Fever rule: Rectal temperature of 38°C (100.4°F) or higher under 3 months always warrants medical attention.
Common Concerns & Red Flags
Per CDC milestone guidance, share concerns with your pediatrician if by 2 months your baby:
- Does not respond to loud sounds.
- Does not watch things as they move.
- Does not smile at people.
- Does not bring hands to mouth at all.
- Cannot hold head up at all when pushing up while on tummy.
- Has stiff or extremely floppy muscle tone.
- Has any rectal temperature of 38°C / 100.4°F or higher.
- Has feeding refusal, very poor weight gain, or fewer than 6 wet diapers per day.
Tips for Parents
- Prepare for the 2-month visit. Write down questions and concerns ahead of time — the appointment goes quickly.
- Plan a low-key day after vaccines. Extra cuddles, on-demand feeds, and a calm environment help.
- Protect your wake windows. A 60-90 minute window means starting wind-down at about 50-60 minutes. Overtiredness is the most common cause of nap battles.
- Watch for postpartum mood symptoms. The 6-8 week mark is when many parents feel the full weight of sleep deprivation; ask for help early.
- Capture the social smiles. Take a moment to enjoy them — they will not stay this novel for long.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a 2-month-old weigh?
A 2-month-old typically weighs 4.2-6.5 kg (9.3-14.3 lb) for boys and 3.9-6.0 kg (8.6-13.2 lb) for girls. Most babies gain roughly 150-200 g (5-7 oz) per week between 1 and 4 months. As with any single weight, what matters more is whether your baby is tracking along their own growth curve on the WHO or CDC chart, not where they sit relative to other babies.
When will my 2-month-old start to smile?
The first true social smile usually appears between 6 and 8 weeks. By the end of month 2, most babies smile responsively at familiar faces and voices. The CDC lists "smiles when you talk to or smile at them" as a key 2-month milestone. If your baby has no social smile by 3 months, mention it to your pediatrician.
How long should a 2-month-old sleep?
Most 2-month-olds sleep 14-16 hours per 24 hours: roughly 8-10 hours at night (broken into 3-5 hour stretches) and 5-7 hours across 3-5 daytime naps. Some babies start consolidating one longer night stretch this month, but feeding still wakes most babies at least twice overnight. Always place baby on the back to sleep, on a firm flat surface, with no loose bedding.
What are typical wake windows at 2 months?
Awake periods between sleeps lengthen to roughly 60-90 minutes at 2 months (up from 45-60 minutes at 1 month). Watch for tired cues — yawning, looking away, fussing, jerky movements — and offer sleep before your baby becomes overtired, which makes settling harder. Overtiredness is the most common cause of fighting naps at this age.
How often should I feed my 2-month-old?
Breastfed babies usually feed 8-10 times in 24 hours; formula-fed babies typically take 120-180 ml (4-6 oz) every 3-4 hours, totaling 6-7 feeds. Cluster feeding still happens — especially around 6-week and 8-week growth spurts. Continue feeding on demand and look for hunger cues rather than watching the clock.
What vaccines does my 2-month-old need?
Per the CDC and AAP schedule, the 2-month visit is one of the largest immunization rounds: DTaP, Hib, IPV (polio), PCV15 or PCV20 (pneumococcal), rotavirus (oral), and either the second or third dose of hepatitis B depending on the brand used. Many of these come as combination shots. Fussiness, mild fever, and tenderness at the injection site for 24-48 hours afterward are normal.
Why is my 2-month-old crying more in the evenings?
Many babies hit their peak crying between weeks 6 and 8. This is the high point of the "period of PURPLE crying" identified by pediatric researchers. Evening "witching hour" fussiness — long bouts of crying that nothing seems to fix — is extremely common and usually resolves by 3-4 months. If crying is intense and inconsolable for 3+ hours per day, 3+ days per week, talk to your doctor about colic.
Should my 2-month-old be holding their head up?
By 2 months, most babies can briefly lift and hold their head up at about a 45-degree angle during tummy time. Full head control (steady head when held upright) typically arrives by 3-4 months. Daily supervised tummy time — building toward 15-30 minutes total per day — is the best way to strengthen neck and shoulder muscles.
When should I call the pediatrician about my 2-month-old?
Call if your baby has a rectal temperature of 38°C (100.4°F) or higher, refuses multiple feeds, has fewer than 6 wet diapers in 24 hours, is unusually sleepy or limp, has worsening jaundice, is not making any sounds beyond crying, never makes eye contact, or never responds to sound. After 2-month vaccines, also call for a fever above 39°C (102°F), persistent inconsolable crying for more than 3 hours, or any seizure-like activity.
Sources
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