Newborn Hiccups: Why They Happen and What Parents Can Do

Newborn hiccups can sound surprisingly loud for such a tiny baby. One minute your baby is resting peacefully after a feed, and the next, their little body gives a rhythmic “hic, hic, hic.” If you are a new parent, it is natural to wonder whether hiccups are uncomfortable, whether you should stop feeding, or whether something is wrong.

In most cases, newborn hiccups are normal, harmless, and temporary. Many babies hiccup from time to time, especially after feeding. The hiccups may last a few minutes and then disappear on their own. Often, they bother parents more than they bother the baby.

Still, knowing why hiccups happen and what you can safely do can make the moment feel less stressful. This guide explains common causes of newborn hiccups, gentle ways to help, what not to try, how feeding habits can reduce hiccups, and when it is worth calling your pediatrician.

What Are Newborn Hiccups?

Hiccups happen when the diaphragm, the muscle below the lungs that helps with breathing, contracts suddenly. This quick contraction is followed by a sudden closing of the vocal cords, which creates the familiar hiccup sound.

For newborns, this reflex is very common. Babies may even hiccup before birth. After birth, hiccups can appear during feeding, after feeding, during burping, while resting, or sometimes for no obvious reason at all.

Most of the time, hiccups are simply part of your baby’s immature digestive and nervous system adjusting to life outside the womb.

Why Do Newborns Get Hiccups?

Newborn hiccups are often connected to feeding and digestion. Because babies have small stomachs and are still learning how to coordinate sucking, swallowing, and breathing, it is easy for air or extra milk to create pressure in the belly.

Common causes include:

  • Swallowing air during feeding
  • Eating too quickly
  • Taking in more milk than the stomach can comfortably hold
  • A very full stomach pressing near the diaphragm
  • Needing to burp
  • Minor spit-up or reflux
  • Sudden changes in feeding rhythm or position

Hiccups do not always mean your baby is in pain. If your newborn is relaxed, breathing normally, and feeding well, a short round of hiccups is usually not a problem.

Are Hiccups Normal in Newborns?

Yes. Hiccups are very normal in newborns and young babies. Some babies hiccup once in a while. Others hiccup several times a day, especially in the first months.

Parents often worry because the movement looks repetitive or strong. But if your baby seems content, has normal color, breathes comfortably, and returns to feeding or sleeping afterward, hiccups are usually just a normal reflex.

As babies grow, their feeding coordination improves, their stomach capacity increases, and hiccups often become less frequent.

How Long Do Newborn Hiccups Last?

Newborn hiccups often last only a few minutes. Some episodes may last longer, especially after feeding. If your baby is calm and otherwise acting normally, you can usually wait and let the hiccups pass.

It is helpful to watch your baby rather than the clock alone. A baby who is hiccupping but relaxed is different from a baby who is hiccupping, crying hard, refusing feeds, arching, coughing, or repeatedly vomiting.

What Should Parents Do When a Newborn Has Hiccups?

Most newborn hiccups do not require treatment. However, there are a few gentle steps you can try if your baby seems bothered or if hiccups interrupt feeding.

1. Pause the Feeding

If hiccups start during a feed, pause for a moment. Hold your baby upright and give them a chance to relax. Sometimes a short break is enough for the diaphragm to settle.

If your baby is hungry and calm, you can resume feeding after a few minutes. If they are frustrated, crying, or gulping, take a longer pause before trying again.

2. Burp Your Baby

Burping can help release trapped air. Try burping during and after feeds, especially if your baby often gets hiccups after eating.

For bottle-fed babies, burping partway through the bottle may help. For breastfed babies, burping when switching sides can be useful, although some breastfed babies swallow less air and may not burp every time.

3. Hold Baby Upright

After feeding, hold your baby upright for a short period. This position can help milk settle and may reduce pressure in the stomach.

You do not need to keep your baby upright for hours. A calm upright hold after feeds may be enough for many babies, especially those who hiccup or spit up often.

4. Offer a Pacifier If Your Baby Uses One

For some babies, sucking on a pacifier can help relax the diaphragm and calm the hiccup reflex. This is optional. If your baby does not use a pacifier, you do not need to introduce one just for hiccups.

5. Wait It Out

Sometimes the best approach is simply to wait. If your baby is comfortable, hiccups usually stop on their own. You can hold your baby, speak softly, or gently rub their back while the episode passes.

What Not to Do for Newborn Hiccups

Adult hiccup remedies are not safe for newborns. A baby’s body is not ready for tricks that adults may use.

Do not try to stop newborn hiccups by:

  • Giving water to a young newborn unless your pediatrician tells you to
  • Giving sugar, honey, lemon, vinegar, or other home remedies
  • Startling or scaring the baby
  • Holding the baby’s breath
  • Pressing on the soft spot or chest
  • Pulling the tongue
  • Using gripe water without discussing it with your pediatrician
  • Putting cereal or thickened feeds in a bottle unless medically recommended

If a remedy feels like it would be unsafe, uncomfortable, or strange to do to a newborn, skip it. Gentle feeding adjustments and time are usually enough.

Feeding Tips to Help Prevent Hiccups

You cannot prevent every hiccup, and you do not need to. But if your baby gets hiccups often after feeding, a few small changes may help.

Feed Before Baby Is Extremely Hungry

A very hungry baby may gulp quickly, cry during the feed, or swallow more air. Feeding when your baby first shows hunger cues may lead to a calmer rhythm.

Early hunger cues can include:

  • Turning the head toward the breast or bottle
  • Opening the mouth
  • Sucking on hands
  • Making small sounds
  • Becoming more alert and active

Crying is often a late hunger cue. If possible, begin feeding before your baby is extremely upset.

Check Bottle Flow

If the bottle nipple flow is too fast, your baby may gulp and swallow extra air. If it is too slow, your baby may work hard, become frustrated, and swallow air while fussing.

Signs that flow may be too fast include coughing, choking, milk spilling from the mouth, wide eyes, or pulling away. Signs that flow may be too slow include collapsing the nipple, long feeds, frustration, or falling asleep before finishing.

Use a Good Latch

For breastfed babies, latch matters. If your baby is slipping, clicking, losing suction, or swallowing lots of air, ask a lactation consultant or pediatrician for help. Small latch adjustments can make feeding more comfortable for both parent and baby.

Try Paced Feeding

For bottle feeding, paced feeding can help slow the rhythm. Hold your baby more upright, keep the bottle more horizontal, and allow short pauses. This gives your baby more control and may reduce gulping.

Avoid Overfeeding

A very full stomach can press near the diaphragm and trigger hiccups. Watch fullness cues such as turning away, relaxed hands, slower sucking, pushing the bottle away, or falling asleep peacefully.

Do not pressure your baby to finish a bottle if they are showing signs of being done, unless your healthcare provider has given specific feeding instructions.

Burping Positions to Try

Different babies respond to different burping positions. Try a few and see which one works best for your baby.

Burping Position How to Do It Best For
Over the shoulder Hold baby upright against your shoulder while supporting the head and back. Babies who like close contact and upright pressure.
Sitting on your lap Support baby’s chest and head with one hand while gently patting or rubbing the back. Babies who need a more upright position.
Tummy across your lap Lay baby tummy-down across your lap with the head supported higher than the chest. Babies who respond to gentle belly pressure.

Use gentle pats or slow back rubs. If your baby does not burp after a few minutes, it is okay to continue feeding or move on. Not every baby burps every time.

Do Hiccups Mean Reflux?

Not always. Many newborns hiccup without having a reflux problem. Spit-up is also common in babies and often improves with time.

However, hiccups may be worth discussing with your pediatrician if they come with other symptoms such as:

  • Frequent painful spit-up
  • Repeated coughing during or after feeds
  • Back arching during feeds
  • Refusing feeds
  • Poor weight gain
  • Severe fussiness after eating
  • Vomiting that seems forceful or frequent
  • Breathing concerns

A few hiccups after feeding are usually not enough to diagnose reflux. The overall pattern matters more: comfort, feeding, growth, breathing, and sleep.

Newborn Hiccups During Sleep

Some babies hiccup while they are sleepy or even during sleep. If your baby is sleeping safely on their back, breathing normally, and not in distress, you usually do not need to wake them just because they have hiccups.

Do not elevate the mattress or place pillows, wedges, rolled blankets, or positioners in the sleep space to prevent hiccups or spit-up. Safe sleep still means a firm, flat surface with no loose bedding.

If your baby sleeps close to your bed in a newborn rocking bassinet, you can monitor them more easily during those early weeks while still keeping them in their own separate sleep space.

Can Hiccups Hurt a Newborn?

Hiccups may look uncomfortable, but most babies are not bothered by them. Some babies even sleep through hiccups. Others may become irritated if hiccups interrupt a feed or make it harder to settle.

If your baby cries because the feeding was paused or because they are still hungry, the hiccups may not be the main problem. Try calming your baby, burping, and resuming feeding slowly when they are ready.

How to Comfort a Baby With Hiccups

Comfort does not have to be complicated. Choose calm, gentle actions that help your baby regulate.

  • Hold your baby upright against your chest.
  • Rub the back slowly.
  • Use a soft voice.
  • Offer a pacifier if your baby likes one.
  • Dim bright lights if your baby seems overstimulated.
  • Pause feeding until your baby relaxes.

If hiccups happen after diaper changes or during the evening fussy period, your baby may simply need a calmer transition. A smart cradle may support soothing routines after feeding, burping, and diaper care, but always place your baby down according to safe sleep guidance.

Diaper Changes, Feeding, and Hiccups: Why Timing Matters

Newborn care often happens in a cycle: feed, burp, change, soothe, sleep. If your baby hiccups often, the order of these steps may affect comfort.

Some babies do better with a diaper change before feeding because they are more comfortable while eating. Others poop during or after feeds and need changing afterward. If hiccups often happen when your baby is crying through a diaper change, try preparing supplies first so the change is quick and calm.

A portable changing table can help keep diapers, wipes, cream, and clean clothes within reach, so you can move through diaper care without extra searching. For a nursery setup, diaper changing tables with storage can also help keep feeding cloths, burp cloths, and diaper supplies organized.

A Simple Hiccup Decision Guide

What You Notice What to Do
Baby is hiccupping but calm Wait it out. Hold upright if you want to comfort them.
Hiccups start during feeding Pause, burp, adjust position, and resume when baby is calm.
Hiccups happen after most bottles Check bottle flow, try paced feeding, and burp more often.
Hiccups come with spit-up but baby is happy and growing Mention it at routine visits, but it may be normal infant spit-up.
Hiccups come with pain, arching, poor feeding, or poor weight gain Call your pediatrician for guidance.
Hiccups seem constant or unusual Track timing, feeding pattern, and symptoms, then discuss with your doctor.

When Should You Call the Pediatrician?

Most newborn hiccups do not need medical care. But you should call your pediatrician if hiccups are frequent, persistent, or paired with signs that your baby may be uncomfortable or not feeding well.

Reach out if your baby has:

  • Hiccups that interfere with feeding often
  • Poor weight gain
  • Repeated forceful vomiting
  • Severe fussiness during or after feeds
  • Back arching with feeds
  • Coughing, choking, or breathing concerns
  • Signs of dehydration, such as fewer wet diapers
  • A sudden change in feeding or behavior

If your baby was born premature, has a medical condition, or your doctor has given special feeding instructions, follow that guidance first.

What Parents Can Track

If you are worried about hiccups, tracking a few details can help your pediatrician understand the pattern.

  • When hiccups happen: before, during, or after feeds
  • How long they usually last
  • Whether baby seems comfortable or distressed
  • Whether spit-up, coughing, or arching happens too
  • How often baby feeds
  • How many wet diapers baby has
  • Whether weight gain has been normal

You do not need to track every hiccup forever. A short record for a few days can be enough if you plan to ask your pediatrician.

Final Thoughts

Newborn hiccups are usually normal, harmless, and short-lived. They often happen because a baby eats quickly, swallows air, has a full stomach, or is still learning how to coordinate feeding and digestion.

In most cases, you can pause feeding, burp your baby, hold them upright, offer a pacifier if they use one, or simply wait for the hiccups to pass. Avoid adult remedies and unsafe home treatments. Most importantly, watch your baby’s overall comfort, feeding, breathing, and growth.

If hiccups are frequent, persistent, or come with pain, poor feeding, coughing, vomiting, or poor weight gain, call your pediatrician. A few hiccups are usually nothing to fear, but your concerns are always worth asking about.

FAQ: Newborn Hiccups

Are newborn hiccups normal?

Yes. Newborn hiccups are very common and usually harmless. They often happen after feeding or when a baby swallows air. Most episodes go away on their own within a few minutes.

Why does my newborn get hiccups after feeding?

Hiccups after feeding may happen when your baby eats quickly, swallows air, drinks more than their stomach can comfortably hold, or needs to burp. A full stomach can put pressure near the diaphragm and trigger hiccups.

Should I stop feeding if my baby has hiccups?

If hiccups start during a feed, pause and burp your baby. If your baby is calm and still hungry, you can resume feeding after a short break. If your baby is upset, help them relax first.

How do I get rid of newborn hiccups?

You can try pausing the feed, burping your baby, holding them upright, offering a pacifier if they use one, or simply waiting. Most hiccups stop without treatment.

Can I give my newborn water for hiccups?

No. Do not give water to a young newborn for hiccups unless your pediatrician specifically tells you to. Adult hiccup remedies are not safe for babies.

Do hiccups mean my baby has reflux?

Not usually. Hiccups alone do not mean reflux. Talk with your pediatrician if hiccups come with painful spit-up, poor feeding, coughing, back arching, severe fussiness, or poor weight gain.

Can my baby sleep with hiccups?

If your baby is sleeping safely on their back, breathing normally, and not distressed, you usually do not need to wake them just because of hiccups. Keep the sleep space firm, flat, and free of loose bedding.

When should I worry about newborn hiccups?

Call your pediatrician if hiccups are frequent, persistent, interfere with feeding, or happen with vomiting, coughing, breathing trouble, poor weight gain, dehydration signs, or unusual distress.

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von Dr. Katherine Bennett – 06 Mai 2026

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