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Planificador de rutina de comidas para bebé: PDF gratis para imprimir

Descarga nuestro planificador de rutina de comidas para bebé en PDF gratis. Horarios por edad desde los 6 meses hasta los 2 años, planificadores diarios y consejos para comidas más tranquilas y felices.

· 12 min read
Baby Feeding Baby-Led Weaning Free Download Free Resources Mealtime Routine Mealtime Tips Printable Starting Solids

Parent-founded Little Puku to share practical, research-backed feeding guides for families navigating baby-led weaning and highchair safety.

Si tu rutina de comidas del bebé se siente más caótica que tranquila, no estás sola. Desde las gachas derramadas hasta la comida lanzada por la habitación, las comidas con los peques pueden poner a prueba hasta al padre más paciente. ¿La buena noticia? Una rutina sencilla y flexible puede marcar una gran diferencia para la nutrición de tu bebé, su disposición a comer y tu propia cordura.

Creamos este planificador de rutina de comidas imprimible gratis para que puedas construir un ritmo que funcione para tu familia. Ya sea que tu peque esté empezando con sólidos o sea un pequeño muy activo con opiniones sobre todo lo que hay en su plato, este planificador te da un marco práctico para poner estructura (sin estrés) en cada comida.

Por qué importa una rutina de comidas

Puntos clave
Por qué la rutina ayuda a la hora de comer
La previsibilidad favorece el apetito, el comportamiento y la nutrición.
Reduce el rechazo
Los bebés que saben qué esperar se sienten más seguros y comen mejor.
Builds hunger cues
Consistent timing helps regulate appetite naturally.
Better nutrition
Planned meals ensure variety across food groups.

Babies and toddlers thrive on predictability. When mealtimes happen at roughly the same times each day, your little one's body learns when to expect food—and their appetite adjusts accordingly. This isn't about rigid schedules or watching the clock. It's about creating a gentle rhythm that helps everyone know what comes next.

Consistency Reduces Fussiness

As parents ourselves, we've seen first-hand how a predictable baby mealtime routine can transform a fussy eater. When children know that lunch always follows morning play, they're less likely to resist sitting down. The routine itself becomes a cue: "It's time to eat now."

Research from the Raising Children Network supports this. Children who eat at predictable intervals are more willing to try new foods and less likely to graze all day on snacks.

Better Nutrition Through Planning

Without a routine, it's easy to fall into a pattern of offering the same safe foods over and over. A simple mealtime plan helps you rotate through food groups—iron-rich proteins, colourful vegetables, whole grains, and healthy fats—so your baby gets balanced nutrition across the week.

  • Fewer missed meals – A routine means you're less likely to realise at 2pm that lunch never happened.
  • Reduced grazing – Structured meal and snack times prevent all-day nibbling that dampens appetite.
  • Easier allergen tracking – Planned meals make it simpler to introduce and monitor new foods safely.
  • Less food waste – When you plan ahead, you buy what you need and use what you buy.

Horarios de comidas de ejemplo por edad

Every baby is different, so treat these sample schedules as starting points rather than strict rules. Adjust times to suit your family's rhythm, your baby's sleep schedule, and their hunger cues.

6–8 Months: Starting Solids

At this stage, solids are about exploration, not calories. Breast milk or formula is still your baby's main source of nutrition. Offer one to two small "meals" around mid-morning and mid-afternoon, timed about an hour after a milk feed so your baby is interested but not starving.

  • 7:00am – Milk feed (breast or bottle)
  • 8:30am – Solids: small serve of iron-rich food + soft fruit or veg
  • 11:00am – Milk feed
  • 2:30pm – Solids (optional second meal): try a new food alongside a familiar one
  • 5:00pm – Milk feed
  • 7:00pm – Milk feed before bed

Not sure what to offer first? Our starting solids checklist walks you through everything you need to have ready.

8–12 Months: Building Confidence

By eight months, most babies are ready for two to three meals a day, with increasing variety and texture. This is when a consistent baby mealtime routine really pays off—your baby starts to anticipate meals and may even show excitement when they see the highchair come out.

  • 7:00am – Milk feed
  • 8:00am – Breakfast: porridge with fruit, scrambled egg, or toast fingers
  • 10:00am – Milk feed + small snack (e.g. rice cake)
  • 12:00pm – Lunch: protein + vegetables + carbohydrate
  • 2:30pm – Milk feed + snack
  • 5:00pm – Dinner: family meal adapted for baby
  • 7:00pm – Milk feed before bed

12–24 Months: Family Mealtimes

Toddlers are ready to join the family table with three proper meals and two snacks each day. Milk (breast, formula, or cow's milk from 12 months) becomes a drink alongside meals rather than a separate feed. This is also when the fussy eating phase often begins—another reason why a solid routine helps.

  • 7:30am – Breakfast with the family
  • 9:30am – Morning snack: fruit, yoghurt, or cheese
  • 12:00pm – Lunch: balanced plate with protein, veg, and carbs
  • 3:00pm – Afternoon snack: veggie sticks with hummus, crackers with nut butter
  • 5:30pm – Dinner with the family
  • Cup of milk before bed (optional)

Cómo crear la rutina de comidas de tu bebé

Building a routine doesn't mean overhauling your entire day. Start small, stay flexible, and build from there. Here's a practical step-by-step approach.

Step 1: Anchor One Meal First

Rather than trying to schedule every meal from day one, choose one mealtime and make it consistent. Breakfast often works well—babies tend to be well-rested and receptive in the morning. Serve it at roughly the same time each day for a week before adding a second meal.

Step 2: Create a Pre-Meal Ritual

Simple cues help your baby understand that mealtime is coming. This might be washing their hands, putting on a bib, or placing them in the highchair while you narrate: "Time for lunch!" From our experience, these small rituals reduce resistance because your baby knows what's coming next.

Step 3: Set Up a Proper Feeding Station

A consistent physical setup matters as much as timing. Make sure your baby is comfortable and properly supported in their highchair. Feeding therapists recommend the 90-90-90 position—hips, knees, and ankles at roughly 90 degrees with feet resting on a stable surface. If your highchair lacks foot support, a highchair footrest makes a significant difference. Add a silicone placemat to contain mess and simplify cleanup.

Step 4: Allow Enough Time

Rushed meals lead to stressed babies (and stressed parents). Aim for 20–30 minutes per meal—long enough for your baby to eat at their own pace, but not so long that the meal drags on. If your baby loses interest or starts playing, it's fine to end the meal calmly.

Step 5: Expand Gradually

Once your anchored meal is running smoothly, add a second. Then a third. Build in snack times with at least 90 minutes between eating occasions so your baby arrives hungry (but not hangry). Use the planner to track what's working and adjust as you go.

Haciendo las comidas agradables

A routine provides structure, but the atmosphere is what makes mealtimes pleasant for everyone. Here's how to keep things positive.

Embrace the Mess

Mess is a sign of learning. When your baby squishes avocado between their fingers or drops pasta on the floor, they're developing fine motor skills and sensory awareness. Rather than hovering with a cloth, let them explore. Our guide on why messy mealtimes are actually a good thing covers this in detail, including practical tips for containing the chaos.

Eat Together When You Can

Babies learn by watching. When they see you eating the same foods, they're more likely to try them. Even if it's just a snack alongside their meal, your presence at the table makes a difference. Family mealtimes also reinforce the social side of eating—sharing food is one of the earliest social skills your child will learn.

Keep Portions Small

Overloaded plates can overwhelm little ones. Start with a tablespoon or two of each food and offer more if they want it. Small portions also mean less waste when (not if) food ends up on the floor.

Set Up for Success

The right highchair accessories genuinely reduce mealtime friction. A proper footrest helps your baby sit comfortably so they can focus on eating rather than balancing. A cushion cover prevents sliding. A placemat makes cleanup faster. These small upgrades add up to calmer, more enjoyable mealtimes for the whole family.

Desafíos comunes en la rutina de comidas

Even with the best routine in place, you'll hit bumps. Here are the most common challenges and what to try.

"My Baby Refuses to Sit in the Highchair"

This is incredibly common, especially around 12–18 months when toddlers want to be on the move. Try a short "transition activity"—hand them a piece of food or a favourite spoon as you're placing them in the chair. Make sure the highchair is comfortable (check positioning and foot support) and keep meal lengths reasonable. Forcing a toddler to sit rarely ends well.

"They Only Want the Same Three Foods"

Selective eating peaks around 18–24 months and is a normal developmental phase. Keep offering variety without pressure. Place one familiar food on the plate alongside something new. It can take 10–15 exposures before a child accepts a new food, so patience is your greatest tool. Our fussy eater tips article has more detailed strategies.

"Mealtimes Are a Battleground"

Power struggles happen when feeding becomes about control. Your job is to decide what, when, and where. Your child's job is to decide whether to eat and how much. This division of responsibility (popularised by feeding expert Ellyn Satter) takes the pressure off both of you. If your baby refuses a meal, stay calm, end the meal, and offer the next scheduled snack or meal as planned.

"The Schedule Falls Apart on Busy Days"

Flexibility is built into any good routine. If you're out and about, adjust times by 30–60 minutes and keep portable snacks on hand. The overall pattern matters more than hitting exact times. Your baby will bounce back to the regular rhythm quickly once you're home.

"My Baby Eats Well at Childcare but Not at Home"

This is more common than you'd think. Childcare environments offer peer modelling (babies watching other babies eat), structured mealtimes, and minimal distractions. At home, try to replicate some of these elements: eat together, minimise screens, and stick to your routine. The consistency will pay off.

Descarga tu planificador de rutina gratuito

Our free baby mealtime routine planner is designed to help you build and maintain a feeding rhythm that works for your family. Print it, stick it on your fridge, and use it to plan each week with confidence.

What's included:

  • Age-appropriate meal schedules from 6 months to 2 years
  • Flexible daily planner with space for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks
  • Tips for handling common mealtime challenges
  • Space to track what's working and what to adjust

Pair it with our First 100 Foods Tracker to track every new food your baby tries, or our weekly meal planner for detailed meal-by-meal planning. If you're navigating baby-led weaning, our BLW beginner's guide covers the essentials.

Preguntas frecuentes

What age should I start a baby mealtime routine?

You can start building a mealtime routine as soon as you begin introducing solids, typically around 6 months. Even one meal a day at a consistent time helps your baby learn that mealtimes are predictable and safe.

How many meals should my baby have each day?

At 6–8 months, one to two small meals alongside milk feeds is plenty. By 8–12 months, aim for two to three meals plus snacks. From 12 months, most toddlers do well with three meals and two snacks each day.

How long should a baby's mealtime last?

Aim for 20–30 minutes per meal. This gives your baby enough time to eat at their own pace without the meal dragging on. If they lose interest or start playing with food consistently, it's fine to calmly end the meal.

What if my baby won't sit in the highchair?

Highchair resistance is very common, especially around 12–18 months. Try handing them a piece of food as you seat them, keep meals short, and make sure they're physically comfortable with proper foot support and positioning.

Should I stick to exact meal times every day?

No—flexibility is important. Aim for roughly the same times each day (within 30–60 minutes), but don't stress if things shift on busy days. The overall pattern matters more than hitting precise times.

How do I handle food refusal without a mealtime battle?

Follow the division of responsibility: you decide what, when, and where to serve food. Your child decides whether to eat and how much. Stay calm, avoid pressure, and offer the next scheduled meal or snack as planned.

Can I use this planner for baby-led weaning?

Absolutely. The planner works for baby-led weaning, traditional purees, or a combination approach. The routine structure is the same regardless of feeding method—you simply adjust the foods and textures to suit your approach.

How do I know if my baby is eating enough?

Watch your baby, not their plate. Signs they're getting enough include steady weight gain, wet nappies, energy, and general contentment. If you're worried about intake, speak with your child health nurse or GP for personalised guidance.

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Frequently asked questions

You can start building a mealtime routine as soon as you begin introducing solids, typically around 6 months. Even one meal a day at a consistent time helps your baby learn that mealtimes are predictable and safe.
At 6–8 months, one to two small meals alongside milk feeds is plenty. By 8–12 months, aim for two to three meals plus snacks. From 12 months, most toddlers do well with three meals and two snacks each day.
Aim for 20–30 minutes per meal. This gives your baby enough time to eat at their own pace without the meal dragging on. If they lose interest or start playing with food consistently, it’s fine to calmly end the meal.
Highchair resistance is very common, especially around 12–18 months. Try handing them a piece of food as you seat them, keep meals short, and make sure they’re physically comfortable with proper foot support and positioning.
No—flexibility is important. Aim for roughly the same times each day (within 30–60 minutes), but don’t stress if things shift on busy days. The overall pattern matters more than hitting precise times.
Follow the division of responsibility: you decide what, when, and where to serve food. Your child decides whether to eat and how much. Stay calm, avoid pressure, and offer the next scheduled meal or snack as planned.
Absolutely. The planner works for baby-led weaning, traditional purees, or a combination approach. The routine structure is the same regardless of feeding method—you simply adjust the foods and textures to suit your approach.
Watch your baby, not their plate. Signs they’re getting enough include steady weight gain, wet nappies, energy, and general contentment. If you’re worried about intake, speak with your child health nurse or GP for personalised guidance.