Sleep & Behavior

The 4pm meltdown: a calm script for the witching hour

toddcovery · 5 min read
The 4pm meltdown: a calm script for the witching hour

The late-afternoon meltdown has a nickname for a reason. Somewhere around 4 or 5pm, an otherwise cheerful toddler dissolves — and the very predictability of it is the good news.

Why 4pm is brutal

By late afternoon, several things stack up at once: accumulated tiredness (especially as naps shorten), a dip in blood sugar before dinner, a whole day’s worth of stimulation and held-together behavior, and a parent who is also running low. A toddler’s thin regulation reserves are simply spent. It isn’t a discipline problem; it’s a fuel problem.

Because it’s predictable, it’s plannable — which is where you get your power back.

Don’t try to win the witching hour. Lower the demands and lower the lights until it’s over.

A calm script

  • Feed early. A real snack at 4pm heads off the hunger crash before it starts.
  • Drop the bar. This is not the hour for new rules, big asks, or errands.
  • Change the channel: get outside, run a bath, or do one slow connection activity.
  • Lead with calm. Your steady tone is the regulator their brain borrows.
When to check in. A rough late afternoon is universal. If meltdowns are extreme across the whole day, or you’re worried about your own ability to stay regulated, your pediatrician can help — including support for the parent, which counts.

Educational content, not medical advice. toddcovery does not diagnose. If something about your child’s development worries you, your pediatrician is the right first call.

More in Sleep & Behavior

More →
The weekly note

The science of the toddler years, translated into what to actually do.

One short, research-backed email a week for parents of 1–4s. Calm, specific, never fear-mongering.

  • Written by a developmental-psychology team
  • Every claim sourced

One email a week · unsubscribe anytime. You’ll get a quick confirm your inbox step, then your welcome note.