Separation Anxiety at Daycare: How to Help Your Child Adjust
Understand why separation anxiety happens and learn proven strategies to help your child (and yourself) cope with daycare drop-offs.
It's 7:45 AM. You're trying to leave for work, but your child is clinging to your leg, crying, begging you not to go. The guilt is crushing. You wonder if you're making a terrible mistake—if daycare is harming your child. You leave feeling awful, and the scene replays in your head all day.
Here's what you need to know: separation anxiety is developmentally normal, extremely common, and almost always temporary. Understanding why it happens and how to help can transform those tearful drop-offs into smooth transitions.
Understanding Separation Anxiety
What Is Separation Anxiety?
Separation anxiety is distress that children experience when separated from their primary attachment figures (usually parents). It's not a disorder or a problem—it's a sign of healthy attachment and a normal developmental stage.
What it looks like:
- Crying, clinging, or protesting at separations
- Physical symptoms (stomachaches, headaches)
- Difficulty settling after parent leaves
- Worry about parent's whereabouts
- Resistance to going to daycare or school
When Separation Anxiety Is Normal
Typical timeline:
| Age | What's Typical | |-----|----------------| | 6-8 months | First signs of stranger anxiety emerge | | 8-14 months | Peak separation anxiety period | | 18-24 months | Another surge is common | | 2-3 years | Gradual decrease for most children | | 3-5 years | May resurge with new situations (new school, transition) | | 6+ years | Usually resolves; occasional flare-ups normal |
Peak times for separation anxiety:
- Starting daycare or school for the first time
- After long breaks (vacation, illness, holidays)
- Major life changes (new sibling, move, parent travel)
- Developmental leaps
- When child is tired, sick, or stressed
Why Separation Anxiety Happens
From a developmental perspective:
- Attachment to caregivers is survival-based (evolutionary)
- Object permanence develops around 8-9 months (understanding that things/people exist when out of sight)
- Before object permanence is solid, separation feels like loss
- Even after understanding you'll return, emotions take time to regulate
What it means:
- Your child is securely attached to you (good thing!)
- They haven't yet developed confidence in your return
- Their emotional brain is stronger than their logical brain
- They need time and experience to build trust
"Separation anxiety isn't a sign something is wrong with your child—it's a sign they love you. The goal isn't to eliminate attachment, but to help them feel secure enough to explore the world." — Dr. Daniel Siegel, Child Psychiatrist
Strategies for Easier Drop-Offs
Before Daycare: Preparation
Talk about daycare positively:
- Read books about daycare and separation
- Play "going to school" with dolls or stuffed animals
- Talk about their teachers and friends by name
- Focus on fun activities they'll do
Practice separations:
- Leave child with trusted family member or friend
- Start with short separations (30 minutes)
- Gradually increase duration
- Always return when you say you will
Prepare the night before:
- Pack bags, lay out clothes
- Get adequate sleep
- Avoid rushed, stressful mornings
The Drop-Off Routine
Keep it consistent:
- Same time, same routine, every day
- Same person doing drop-off when possible
- Same goodbye ritual (see below)
- Predictability builds security
Keep it brief:
- Aim for 5 minutes or less
- Long, lingering goodbyes increase distress
- Your anxiety amplifies theirs
Create a goodbye ritual:
- Special handshake or hug routine
- "Kiss in the palm" (like The Kissing Hand)
- Same words each time: "I love you. I'll be back after snack."
- Wave from the window
Don't sneak away:
- Sneaking increases anxiety and distrust
- Child needs to see you leave and experience your return
- Say goodbye clearly, even if they're distracted
What to Say
Helpful phrases:
- "I love you. I'll be back to pick you up after nap."
- "Your teacher will take good care of you."
- "You're going to have a fun day with your friends."
- "I know it's hard to say goodbye. I'll miss you too."
What to avoid:
- "Please don't cry" (invalidating their feelings)
- "Be brave" (implies they shouldn't feel scared)
- "I'll be right back" (if you won't be)
- Excessive reassurance or hovering
- Coming back for "one more hug"
After Drop-Off
Trust the process:
- Most children stop crying within 10-15 minutes
- Distraction and engagement help them transition
- Ask for updates or photos if helpful
- Resist calling constantly to check
Trust the caregivers:
- They've seen this many times before
- They'll comfort your child
- They'll contact you if truly needed
At Pickup
Reunion matters:
- Be on time (late pickup increases anxiety next day)
- Greet warmly and enthusiastically
- Allow transition time (don't rush them out)
- Talk about their day positively
Expect some post-daycare behavior:
- Meltdowns, clinginess, or acting out are normal
- They've been "holding it together" all day
- Provide connection and patience
- This improves over time
Helping Different Age Groups
Infants (6-12 months)
What helps:
- Consistent caregiver assignments
- Familiar comfort objects (blanket, lovey)
- Something with your scent
- Family photos in the infant room
- Gradual phase-in if possible
What to expect:
- Crying at drop-off
- Watching for your return
- May take weeks to fully adjust
- Typically adapts faster than you expect
Toddlers (1-3 years)
What helps:
- Consistent, brief goodbye routine
- Talking about daycare at home
- "Magic" goodbye strategies (kiss in palm, special wave)
- Transitional objects (family photo, small toy)
- Engaging them in an activity before leaving
What to expect:
- Most intense separation anxiety period
- May appear fine, then regress
- Drop-off may be hard; they're usually fine after
- Takes 2-4 weeks typically
Preschoolers (3-5 years)
What helps:
- Talking through feelings ahead of time
- Involving them in preparation (pack bag, choose clothes)
- Discussing the schedule ("After lunch and nap, I'll be there")
- Role-playing drop-off at home
- Making friends at daycare
What to expect:
- Can verbalize fears (address them)
- May have specific worries (address specifically)
- Usually adjusts faster than younger kids
- May have resurgence with new classroom or school
When Separation Anxiety Persists
Normal vs. Concerning
Normal separation anxiety:
- Crying stops within 15-20 minutes of drop-off
- Child is engaged and happy during the day
- Improves gradually over 4-6 weeks
- Resurges occasionally but recovers
- No significant developmental regression
May need additional support if:
- Crying continues most of the day, every day
- No improvement after 6-8 weeks
- Significant regression (toileting, speech, behavior)
- Physical symptoms without medical cause
- Extreme anxiety that interferes with functioning
- Child refuses to go at all, persistently
What to Do If It's Severe
Steps to take:
-
Rule out problems at daycare
- Is something happening that's causing fear?
- Are caregivers warm and responsive?
- Is there a specific person or situation causing distress?
-
Talk to your pediatrician
- Rule out medical issues
- Discuss developmental concerns
- Get referral to specialist if needed
-
Consider professional support
- Child therapist specializing in anxiety
- Play therapy
- Parent-child interaction therapy
-
Evaluate the fit
- Is this daycare right for your child?
- Would smaller setting help?
- Does child need more gradual transition?
Separation Anxiety Disorder
When it becomes a disorder:
- Significantly beyond what's developmentally typical
- Interferes with daily functioning
- Causes significant distress
- Lasts at least 4 weeks (in children)
Signs to watch for:
- Excessive fear about something happening to parent
- Refusal to leave home or parent
- Nightmares about separation
- Physical symptoms (headaches, stomachaches) regularly
- Extreme distress at separation for extended periods
Treatment options:
- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
- Parent training in anxiety management
- Gradual exposure therapy
- In some cases, medication (older children)
Helping Yourself Cope
Your Feelings Matter Too
Common parent experiences:
- Guilt about leaving
- Anxiety about child's wellbeing
- Doubt about the decision
- Sadness about separation
- Relief followed by guilt about feeling relief
All of these are normal. The transition is hard for parents too.
Strategies for Parents
Manage your own anxiety:
- Your child reads your emotions
- If you're anxious, they'll be more anxious
- Practice staying calm and confident at drop-off
- Save your tears for after you leave
Build confidence in your choice:
- Remind yourself why you chose this daycare
- Recall positive interactions you've observed
- Trust that adjustment takes time
- Connect with other parents who've been through it
Get support:
- Talk to your partner, friends, family
- Connect with other daycare parents
- Consider talking to a therapist if struggling
- Practice self-care during this transition
"I cried every day for the first week. By month two, I'd see her running to her friends at drop-off and I'd wonder what I was so worried about." — Parent from Chicago
Tips from Teachers
What daycare teachers want parents to know:
-
Your child usually calms down quickly. "By the time you're in your car, they're playing happily."
-
Brief goodbyes are best. "When parents linger, it prolongs the distress."
-
We're on your team. "Tell us what works. We want to help."
-
This is normal. "We see this every day. Your child is not broken."
-
It gets better. "Almost every child adjusts. Trust the process."
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Should I stay until my child stops crying?
A: No. Staying prolongs the transition and teaches your child that crying keeps you there. It's better to leave confidently after your goodbye routine. Trust the teachers to comfort your child.
Q: My child is fine at drop-off but cries when I pick them up. Why?
A: This is common! Seeing you triggers a release of all the emotions they've been holding. It's actually a sign they feel safe with you. Give extra comfort and connection at pickup and bedtime.
Q: Should I avoid talking about daycare at home?
A: No—talk about it positively! Read books, play pretend daycare, discuss their friends and teachers. Familiarity and positive associations help.
Q: My child was fine for weeks and now suddenly has separation anxiety again. What happened?
A: Regression is normal, especially after breaks, changes, or developmental leaps. Stay consistent with your routine and it should pass quickly.
Q: Is my child's separation anxiety a sign they shouldn't be in daycare?
A: Almost certainly not. Separation anxiety is normal at any age and in any care setting. It's not a sign that daycare is wrong—it's a sign your child loves you and is adjusting to a big change.
Conclusion
Separation anxiety is one of the hardest parts of parenting through the daycare transition. Watching your child cry is gut-wrenching, even when you know it's normal. Here's what to remember:
- It's temporary. Most children adjust within 4-6 weeks.
- It's a sign of healthy attachment. Your child loves you deeply.
- Brief, consistent goodbyes help. Keep it short and confident.
- Trust the caregivers. They're experienced and will comfort your child.
- It gets easier. Soon you'll see your child running happily into class.
The tearful drop-offs won't last forever. With patience, consistency, and confidence, both you and your child will adjust. One day, you'll wave goodbye to a child who barely looks back—because they know you'll return, and they know they're safe where they are.
Want more help with daycare transitions? Check out our guides on preparing your child for daycare, infant daycare, toddler daycare, and choosing the right daycare.
Written by
ChildCarePath Team
Our team is dedicated to helping families find quality child care options through well-researched guides and resources.
Related Guides
12 Childcare Mistakes Parents Make (And How to Avoid Them)
Avoid common childcare mistakes that cost money, time, and peace of mind. Learn what experienced parents wish they knew before choosing care.
Communicating with Child Care Providers: Building a Strong Partnership
Master parent-provider communication for better child care. Learn how to share concerns, handle disagreements, and build relationships with caregivers.
Managing Food Allergies at Daycare: A Complete Guide for Parents
Protect your child with food allergies at daycare. Learn how to communicate with providers, create allergy action plans, and ensure your child's safety.
10 Signs of Quality Childcare: What Every Parent Should Look For
Learn the 10 key indicators of quality childcare. Know exactly what to look for when evaluating daycare, preschool, nannies, and any care provider.
Understanding Child Care Licensing: State Requirements Explained
Learn what child care licensing means, why it matters, and what requirements providers must meet. Includes how to verify licensing and what to look for.
Child Care Background Checks: What Parents Should Verify
Learn what background checks are required for child care providers, what they reveal, and how to verify your provider has been properly screened.