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Health · toddlerMedically reviewed

Bedwetting

Nighttime wetting is common and normal through the early school years. Patience and routine help.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Elena Vasquez, MD, FAAP, Board-certified pediatrician & medical reviewer· Last updated June 11, 2026
Updated June 2026 Fact-checked

Key facts

Common symptoms

Signs commonly linked with bedwetting. Every child is different — use these as a guide, not a diagnosis.

  • Wetting at night
  • Dry days

Understanding bedwetting

Nighttime wetting is common and normal through the early school years. Patience and routine help. It helps to know what you're seeing and what's worth a closer look — this guide walks through the signs, the likely cause, simple home care, and the specific moments to call your doctor.

Signs to look for

The most common signs of bedwetting are wetting at night, dry days. They vary from child to child, and not everyone has all of them — the pattern and how your child is doing overall matter more than any single symptom.

What causes it

Toddlers are busy explorers with developing bodies and brand-new social exposure (daycare, playgrounds, siblings), so many issues at this age come down to normal development or the everyday germs and bumps that come with it. Most resolve with time, routine, and simple care.

Caring for bedwetting

At home, focus on comfort and routine: plenty of fluids, rest, reassurance, and the specific, age-appropriate steps your pediatrician recommends. Keep things low-pressure (especially around eating, sleep, or potty issues), and watch the trend over a few days — steady improvement is the reassuring sign.

When to call your doctor

Call your pediatrician if symptoms are severe, worsening, or just not improving, or any time your gut says something is off. Seek urgent care right away for a baby under 3 months with any fever (100.4°F / 38°C or higher), trouble breathing or very fast breathing, a stiff neck, a rash that doesn't fade when pressed, signs of dehydration (few wet diapers, no tears, a sunken soft spot), repeated forceful vomiting, or a child who is unusually hard to wake or limp.

The bottom line

Bedwetting is a normal part of these years, and most cases are manageable with the right care and a little patience. Use this page to know what's expected and what isn't — and remember it's educational, not a substitute for advice from a provider who knows your child or your pregnancy.

Frequently asked

What are the symptoms of bedwetting?

Common signs include wetting at night, dry days. Symptoms vary between children, and not every child has all of them.

When should I see a doctor about bedwetting?

Contact your pediatrician if symptoms are severe, worsening, or not improving, if your child seems very unwell, or any time you’re worried — trust your instincts. For any fever in a baby under 3 months, trouble breathing, a stiff neck, a non-blanching rash, severe dehydration, or a baby who is very hard to wake, seek urgent care. This overview is educational and not a substitute for medical advice.

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References

Sources we consult

We cross-check our editorial guidance against these authorities. Click any source for the original.

Reviewed by

Fact-checked by Dr. Elena Vasquez, MD, FAAP (Board-certified pediatrician & medical reviewer)