Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Children’s Sleep Problems

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy adapted for children’s sleep (an age-appropriate form of CBT-I) is an evidence-based, effective and safe treatment that targets the thinking patterns and behaviours that maintain sleep difficulties. The approach is tailored to the child’s age, the nature of the difficulty, and the family’s dynamics, and it is the front-line treatment for a wide range of childhood sleep problems.

The central role of parents in younger children

In the early and middle years, parents are a key driver of treatment. A young child’s sleep patterns are shaped largely by parental responses around bedtime, night waking and distress. CBT for younger children’s sleep is therefore primarily delivered through the parents, not directly to the child.

The work includes:

Changing thoughts as well as behaviour

CBT for children’s sleep is not just about what to do — it also addresses how to think. Many parents act out of worry, guilt or fear — natural feelings, but ones that can perpetuate the problem. Treatment helps parents identify the thoughts that get in the way (for example, “if she cries it will damage her” or “he is too small to fall asleep alone”), gently challenge them, and build a calmer, more confident parental stance. This change in parental confidence is often the single most powerful ingredient.

Working directly with older children and teenagers

As children get older, more of the work can be done directly with the child or adolescent. This typically includes:

Even with older children and teenagers, parallel work with parents is often important — particularly where there are existing dependence patterns, anxiety, or conflict around sleep.

The importance of a proper assessment

Childhood sleep difficulties are not all the same. The category includes insomnia, night waking, night terrors, nightmares, sleep-disordered breathing, anxiety-driven sleep onset difficulty, sleep problems alongside ADHD, and more. Each requires a different approach. Before treatment begins, a careful clinical assessment includes:

Accurate assessment makes treatment more focused, more effective, and shorter.

Key points

In summary

CBT for children’s sleep problems offers a professional, age-appropriate, family-tailored response, based on changing the patterns and behaviours that maintain difficulty. Working effectively with parents in the early years and integrating the child or teenager later allows for more than just better sleep — it builds the child’s sense of safety, independence, and overall wellbeing.