How to start babies on solid food: An evidence-based guide

Introducing complementary foods to your baby is a messy, amusing, and sometimes frustrating business. How do you start babies on solid food? It depends on your baby’s developmental skills, and on whether or not you want to offer your baby finger foods. These evidence-based tips explain how to start babies on solid food, what to expect, and how to cope with a baby’s negative reactions.

baby at high chair, father spoon feeding infant cereal

Getting started with solids: The first step is to check your goals

When you begin to introduce solid foods to your baby, the point isn’t to get your baby to ingest as much as possible.

Your baby has never before consumed anything but milk or formula. Now you’re asking your baby to put something totally different in her mouth, and that’s going to feel very weird to her. It evokes all kinds of new, strange sensations. It’s physically challenging. It requires new movements of the tongue and lips.

So the immediate goal is to allow your baby the time and opportunity to learn about, and get comfortable with, the new stuff.

Your baby might not swallow much food during your first feeding session. Your baby might not swallow any food at all! It’s victory just to get your baby to see, smell, and taste. Adjust your expectations, and focus, in the beginning, on letting your baby see, explore, and sample.

Remember, this includes giving your baby the opportunity to examine utensils as well as foods. How would you like it if you’ve never encountered a spoon before, and someone tried to stick one in your mouth?

Another important goal? Focused attention and communication.

Your baby’s initial experiences with eating solids will go more smoothly if you engage him face-to-face, tune into what’s going on, and model some of the actions you want your baby to perform. It will help him learn the skills he needs to eat solid foods.

But learning about the mechanics of eating is just the beginning. Meal times are also excellent opportunities to learn new words.

When caregivers interact with their babies at meal time — face-to-face — and engage babies in relevant conversation, they tend to repeat certain words at just the right moment. Precisely when babies are interested and paying attention. So babies learn the words for different foods, eating utensils, and parts of the body. “Oh! Do you want more banana? Open your mouth! Here comes the spoon!”

You should also keep in mind that you aren’t trying to replace your baby’s breast milk or formula intake with solid food.

That’s because solid foods don’t provide the complete nutrition that young infants need. If young babies reduce their breast milk intake, and replace it with cereal or other baby foods, they are at risk for poor nutrition (Sen et al 2017).

This is why pediatricians refer to this transitional stage as “complementary feeding.” Your baby isn’t switching to solid foods. Your baby is just adding new foods to his repertoire.

So when you introduce solids to your baby, you are entering a transitional period. Your baby will still rely on breast milk or formula for the bulk of his or her nutritional needs. But your baby will be learning about solid foods — learning how to eat, and how to accept new flavors and textures.

Understanding these things can keep you from becoming overly frustrated. Your baby doesn’t have to empty a jar of baby food in order to make progress. Repeated tasting of foods — and practice moving food around in the mouth — is important progress by itself. So is the process of communicating with during mealtime.

What else does the evidence tell us about introducing solids to babies? Here are some common questions — and answers.

1. When is a baby ready to start solid foods?

Experts agree that you shouldn’t start until your baby can hold his or her head steady, and can sit upright in a high chair or infant feeding seat. Babies need to stay vertical so they can swallow well and avoid choking.

In addition, you’ll have more success if you wait until

  • your baby shows signs of being curious about food, and
  • your baby is developing the ability to transfer food to the back of the mouth with his or her tongue.

What about a baby’s age? How old should a baby be?

For decades, pediatric organizations have recommended that babies breastfeed exclusively until 6 months postpartum. Then parents are advised to begin introducing solids. Waiting much beyond 6 months isn’t usually a good idea, because by this age babies most need solid foods to help meet their nutritional needs — and avoid deficiencies.

But recent research suggests at least one advantage for babies who start between 4 and 6 months: Exposure to foods during this time frame might help lower a baby’s risk of developing allergies (see below).

It’s also possible that introducing a variety of foods between 4-6 months could help make children more willing to try new foods as they get older (Harris and Mason 2017). And if your pediatrician determines that your baby is at risk for an iron deficiency, introducting solids before 6 months may be a good way to ensure iron sufficiency (Castenmiller et al 2019).

Why not start solids even earlier?

As noted above, babies need to develop the necessary motor skills for consuming pureed foods, so if we try too soon, we may encounter feeding difficulties (Castenmiller et al 2019). Moreover, experts warn against starting before 4 months, because babies younger than 4 months are at higher risk of choking.

In addition, babies may respond to the introduction of solids by drinking less of the breast milk or formula they need to thrive. And studies suggest that starting solids before 4 months doesn’t reduce the risk of allergies (West 2017), and some researchers worry that it might actually increase the risk. 

So that’s the argument for targeting the 4-6 month time window, a time window embraced by the European Commission’s Panel on Nutrition, Novel Foods and Food Allergens. Most babies aren’t developmentally ready before 4 months, and, to ensure good nutrition, most babies will need begin consuming complementary foods by around 6 months.

However, so far we’ve been considering a scenario where you spoon-feed a young baby puréed foods. What if you wait until your baby has attained certain fine motor skils — being able to grasp small pieces of food, and bring them to his or her mouth? What if you wait until this happens (usually around the age of 6 months — see Wright et al 2011) and then you begin by offering your baby a choice of finger foods?

Baby-led weaning: Another approach to introducing solids

Waiting, and then letting babies choose from a set of pre-selected, safe finger foods, is the cornerstone of an approach called “baby-led weaning.” 

In studies that compared baby-led weaning to traditional feeding, researchers haven’t found any notable, long-term differences in outcome. As long as parents are careful to offer their babies the right mix of foods — and avoid choking hazards — child outcomes have been similar for both groups (e.g., Dogan et al 2018; Morison et al 2018; Boswell 2021; Moreira et al 2024).

To the degree that there are any differences, the research hints that baby-led weaning might help children avoid developing “food fussiness” (Fu et al 2018; Komninou et al 2019). Previous research — suggesting that infant-led weaning is linked with more fruit and vegetable consumption during toddlerhood (Morison et al 2018) — has been countered by study that found the opposite (Fu et al 2018).

Choosing the right timing: What’s the takeaway?

If your baby meets the basic safety prerequisites, and you provide your baby with purées, then your baby is ready to start eating “baby food” at 4 months. Starting between 4 to 6 months might reduce your child’s risk of developing allergies.

But it’s not clear if your baby will be any worse off if you wait until 6 months and begin your baby on solids by offering a variety of safe, nutritious, finger foods. Possibly, you will miss an opportunity to lower your child’s allergy risk, but we need more research to be sure.

2. What supplies are needed to start babies on solid foods?

As noted above, your baby needs to be able to sit up, in a stable position, during feedings. You also want to provide your baby to have a surface to grab onto, and a workspace for investigating things. In addition, you need to be able to sit in front of your baby during feedings, so you can engage your baby at eye level. Your baby is going to be watching your face for guidance.

A good high chair — one with adjustable tray height — will tick all the boxes for these needs.

Next, if you will be spoon-feeding your baby, you will need to get multiple spoons designed for beginners. This means the bowl of the spoon — the part that holds the food — should be only slightly curved, or even flat. You don’t need the spoon to hold very much, and the greater the curvature or size of the bowl of the spoon, the harder it will be for your baby to slurp the food after the spoon goes into the mouth.

So get at least two soft baby spoons, made of materials that are BPA-free. Extra spoons will come in handy if your baby wants to take yours away (see below).

What about the mess?

This is definitely going to be messy, so you might want to prepare by getting an easy-to-wipe-off bib, and a splash mat for the floor.

In addition, it’s a good idea to think ahead about dishes that might end up on the floor.

Consider acquiring several non-breakable baby serving dishes. Again, look for items that are BPA-free.

3. How should I prepare a baby for his or her first encounter with solid foods?

This goes back to what I mentioned in the introduction. You’re going to be asking your baby to experience many new sensations, and learning new motor skills. So you need to give your baby the chance to examine the new foods and utensils. Show your baby the spoon, and let him touch it. Show your baby the food before you try to put it into her mouth.

4. What should a baby’s first food be?

jars of pureed carrots and infant spoons...what parents need to start babies on solids

If you live in the United States, you’ve probably heard recommendations about unseasoned rice — puréed and mixed with breast milk or formula. Typically, parents are advised to mix infant rice cereal to a very thin consistency.

This works. It’s acceptable. But there haven’t been any studies showing that rice is the best choice, and if you take an anthropological perspective — looking at how people have fed their babies worldwide — it’s clear that rice is just one of many infant foods.

For example, in traditional agricultural societies, parents provide their babies with a strained or puréed mash of whatever carb-rich staple was at hand  — millet, corn, oats, or rice — and mixed it with animal milk.

Hunter-gatherers offered their babies mashed-up fish, meat, and animal fat (Howcraft 2013).

Nowadays, medical organizations are more savvy to all of this, and they recognize that babies may begin with a variety of different puréed foods.

In fact, the American Academy of Pediatrics notes that puréed meats are good first foods, especially for babies that have been exclusively breastfed. Meats are a good source of iron, and iron stores can become depleted in breastfed babies.

Other good choices include puréed bananas, apples, pears, peaches, and sweet potatoes.

But the emphasis is on puréed foods — not on chunks, globs, or sticky pastes. These latter foods, like nut butters, are choking hazards, so keep these away from your baby.

Likewise, don’t add honey to your baby’s foods — it can cause botulism.

And if you’re feeding an older baby — 6 months and up — and want to introduce finger foods? Follow these strict guidelines to avoid choking hazards.

In their carefully-planned program for safe baby-led weaning, BLISS (“Baby-Led Introduction to SolidS”), researcher Lisa Daniels and her colleagues advise parents to follow these guidelines (2015):

  • Always test the foods yourself before you give them to your baby. Make sure foods are soft enough “to mash with the tongue on the roof of the mouth (or are large enough that small pieces don’t break off when sucked or chewed, e.g., strips of meat).”
  • Don’t offer foods that “form a crumb in the mouth.”
  • Make sure the foods you offer “are at least as long as the child’s fist, on at least one side of the food.”
  • Make sure your baby is always sitting upright during the meal — not leaning back.
  • Don’t leave your baby unattended. An adult should monitor the baby at all times during the meal.
  • Don’t try to put finger foods in your baby’s mouth. “Never put whole foods into the infant’s mouth – the infant must do this at their own pace and under their own control.”

5. Should I avoid feeding my baby foods that are potentially allergenic?

cute baby sticks tongue out in anticipation of mother's spoon feeding

Different families have different health concerns and risk factors, so you should discuss this with your pediatrician to be sure.

But in general, the news for babies without special risk factors is reassuring.  You probably don’t need to limit your baby’s diet to hypo-allergenic foods.

On the contrary, recent studies suggest that early exposure to potentially allergenic foods might actually protect children from developing allergies (e.g., Abrams and Becker 2015, Dutoit et al 2016; Ierodiakonou et al 2016; Scarpone et al 2023).

For example, researchers reviewing evidence for the Journal of the American Medical Association have concluded there is “moderate-certainty evidence from 5 trials (1915 participants)” that babies introduced to eggs between 4 and 6 months are at lower risk for developing an egg allergy.

In addition, the researchers judged that there was “moderate-certainty evidence from 2 trials (1550 participants) that early peanut introduction at 4 to 11 months was associated with reduced peanut allergy” (Ierodiakonou et al 2016). 

They also judged there was “high-certainty evidence that the timing of gluten was not associated with celiac disease risk” (Ierodiakonou et al 2016).

If this sounds like a U-turn in our understanding of allergy risk, it is. Years ago, pediatric organizations advised parents to avoid exposing their babies to potentially allergenic foods. They thought that early exposure could induce allergies. But the old advice is shifting in response to the evidence.

For instance, the American Academy of Pediatrics (2017) advises:

“There is no evidence that waiting to introduce baby-safe (soft), allergy-causing foods, such as eggs, dairy, soy, peanuts, or fish, beyond 4 to 6 months of age prevents food allergy.”

A notable exception concerns infants with older siblings who are allergic to peanuts. If this is your situation, researchers recommend that you get your baby tested by qualified allergist before exposing your baby to peanuts (Liem et al 2004).

6. How do we get babies to open their mouths? Close their mouths? Perform the actions to actually eat?

This is where that face-to-face communication is so important. Your baby will learn from your own modeling. You can start by tasting the food yourself. Showing how it’s done. Then when you present a spoonful of food to your baby, you can open your own mouth and encourage your baby to mimic you. Close your mouth after the food goes in.

Don’t be afraid to look goofy. I can tell you as a biological anthropologist who has studied the evolution of social learning…this is how our babies are designed to learn. Get in touch with your inner mime.

7. Can I add spices to baby food?

As I note elsewhere, experiments suggest that babies enjoy flavors like garlic, and overall, the evidence is clear: There is nothing natural or normal about restricting infants to flavorless, bland food.

Even before they are born, infants are exposed to flavors in the foods that their mothers eat. Food flavors are also present in breast milk. And in cultures throughout the world, babies’ first foods are mashed up or pureed versions of the foods their parents eat.

This doesn’t mean we should spice up an infant’s food with reckless abandon. Babies may experience flavors a bit differently than we do, and have a lower tolerance for bitter flavors and spicy irritants. 

Moreover, some commercially available spices are contaminated with lead, which you can learn more about from this Consumer Reports article.

So it makes sense to avoid overwhelming your infant with intense flavors, and to be cautious about the source of your spices. But studies indicate that babies tend to like flavors they have encountered via their mothers’ diets — during gestation and breastfeeding. If spices like garlic, cumin, or cinnamon are a part of your diet, your baby may be appreciative of such flavors.

8. What if the baby makes faces while eating?

infant squints and scowls while tasting pumpkin puree from a spoon

What if a baby makes dramatic, negative facial expressions after tasting a particular food? Does this mean you should stop offering it?

Babies are notorious for making faces in reaction to new foods (Forestell and Mennella 2017).

For example, in one study, researchers recorded the facial expressions of babies tasting pureed green beans for the first time (Forestell and Mennella 2007).

These were the most common reactions:

  • 95% of the babies squinted
  • 82% waggled their brows
  • 76% raised their upper lips
  • 42% wrinkled their noses

In short, babies looked disgusted, and the more disgusted they looked, the more slowly they ate!

But here’s the important point: They got over their initial dislike for green beans. It just took time.

After following an 8-day regimen of repeated feedings, the babies were eating three times as much pureed green beans as they had eaten during their very first experience.

But none of this means you should force your baby to eat. That’s not a good idea. Instead, hold a spoonful of the food up to your baby’s mouth until he or she has pushed it away. Then wait a bit, and try again, for a total of three tries.

9. What if a baby keeps pushing the food back out with his or her tongue?

That’s not unusual. Nor is it unusual for a baby to use his tongue to push food to wrong parts of his mouth. Instead of moving food to the back of the throat, where it can be swallowed, babies may push food into the spaces between their gums and cheeks, and end up spitting some (or all) of the food out.

What’s going on?

Part of the problem is that your baby is still experiencing what doctors call the tongue thrust reflex — automatically pushing the tongue forward in response to stimulation of the mouth. The reflex is good for suckling, but not so helpful for ingesting solid food.

Another problem is that your baby is still developing the necessary skills to move food toward the back of the mouth.

So if your baby is ejecting food, does this mean you should stop trying to feed your baby solids?

If your baby is very young, and pushes out everything you try to feed him or her, then you might wait a few days, and try again. But if your baby is doing it only sometimes, then you’ll want to keep at it. Your baby needs the practice!

And meanwhile — to cope with all that ejected food — you can get a bib with a catcher pocket at the bottoom. I used these with one of my babies, and it was very helpful.

10. What should I do if my baby rejects a new food?

Sometimes it isn’t just that your baby makes funny faces.

Your baby actively rejects food, by turning away from it, or pushing back the spoon.

It’s important to respect these signals and back off for a while. But you shouldn’t giving up entirely. Experts advise that you try again — the next day.

Research confirms that it’s perfectly normal for babies to reject new foods on their first, second, and even third tries In fact, babies need many, repeated tastings to develop a liking for a food.

In experimental studies, it has taken 8-10 days of repeated, daily exposure for babies to start accepting a new food (Mura Paroche et al 2017; Forestell and Mennella 2007).

So the trick is staying the course, even if your baby seems unenthusiastic. In a given feeding session, keep offering the food until your baby has rejected it three times (by turning away from it, or pushing back the spoon). Then try again tomorrow.

And be advised that you might not notice when things start to change. In the food introduction experiments, parents reported that they perceived no differences over time, even though objective measurements showed the babies had started to come around: They were definitely eating more of the new foods.

11. Should I put off introducing my baby to bitter vegetables?

You might be thinking that there’s no point in trying to get your baby to a bitter vegetable like kale. Wait until your child is a toddler. Or even later.

But an experimental study suggests children are actually more likely to accept a new, bitter food when they are between the ages of 6 and 12 months, so you don’t need to delay.

When Susan Thompson and her colleagues tested more than 100 young children, they found that babies in this age-group accepted more tastes — and showed more signs of liking — kale than did children over the age of 18 months (Thompson et al 2021).

12. What if a baby grabs the spoon during a feeding?

Babies are smart and full of curiosity, so it’s understandable if they want to examine the implements we’re trying to stick in their mouths.  Let your baby take the spoon and look it over. Meanwhile, you can continue the feeding with another spoon.

Does your baby try to grab that one as well? Some parents have found success by adding even more spoons to the mix — one or more for the parent, and two for the baby. The idea here is to keep both of the baby’s hands occupied (holding spoons) while you feed.

But you might also try handing your baby a spoon that’s been loaded with food. Help guide the spoon to your baby’s mouth, or let your baby attempt it on his own.

Your baby’s behavior can be frustrating, and cause a lot of mess. But keep in mind: This isn’t a feed-or-starve situation.

Your baby doesn’t have to ingest much solid food during these sessions. They are mostly about learning. And if your baby is very keen to hold and use spoons, she’s probably ready to learn self-feeding, which is a good thing. Allowing your baby to practice will hasten the day when she can eat independently.

13. When can babies eat lumpy foods?

Babies need to learn about food textures as well as food flavors, so consider introducing mashed or slightly lumpy foods around 6-7 months — and before 9 months.

But wait! Babies don’t even have teeth yet at this age. So how does this work?

The answer is that babies can mash soft, lumpy foods with their gums. And the exercise this provides might help babies develop their chewing muscles. Moreover, research suggests that babies may be less likely to develop fussy eating habits if they are exposed to lumpy foods before 9 months of age (Coulthard et al 2009).

But watch out for choking hazards. Some foods might be too lumpy. How can you tell?  Researchers recommend you taste the food yourself, and make sure the lumps are soft enough to mash between your tongue and the roof of your mouth (Cameron et al 2015). Foods that fail this test are high risk choking hazards.

14. How can I avoid raising a picky eater?

Some factors beyond your control. As I explain in this evidence-based article about the origins of picky eaters, some individuals inherit traits that make them more resistant to eating new foods (Mennela et al 2016).

But parents can make a difference. As noted above, the flavors in a mother’s diet make their way into her milk. And studies reveal that babies develop preferences for these flavors.

So breastfeeding may be one way to “program” your child to accept a wider range of foods.

Consistent with this idea, researchers have found that toddlers tend to eat more vegetables if they have a history of breastfeeding longer (de Lauzon-Guillain et al 2013; Okubo et al 2016).

And the other important factor is exposing your baby to a variety of solid foods.

When researchers have tracked children over time, they’ve found a correlation between early food experiences and later eating habits. Kids who are introduced to many different foods during infancy tend to eat a broader array of fruits and vegetables.

So it’s probably a good idea to resist offering your baby only a small number of favorite foods. Keep introducing your baby to new flavors and textures — especially vegetable foods that infants may take longer to develop a liking for.


References: How to start babies on solid foods

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title image of father spoon-speeding distracted infant by Monkey Business Images / shutterstock

image of baby being spoon fed by woman istock / yamasan

image of jars of baby food by Veronika Idiyat / shutterstock

image of baby squinting and scowling while tasting pumpkin puree on a spoon by Impact Photography / shuttstock

Content last modified 1/2024. Portions of the text are derived from earlier versions of this article, written by the same author.