Newborn hiccups can surprise new parents. Your baby may be peacefully feeding, sleeping, or lying in your arms when a tiny rhythmic “hic” begins. It can sound uncomfortable, and it may make you wonder whether your baby has gas, reflux, overfeeding, or trouble breathing.
The reassuring answer is that newborn hiccups are usually normal. In many babies, they are mild, short, and more upsetting to parents than to the baby. Hiccups can happen because a newborn’s diaphragm and digestive system are still developing. They may appear after feeding, during burping, when the stomach is full, or when your baby swallows extra air.
This guide explains why newborn hiccups happen, how to soothe them safely, what not to do, how to prevent hiccups during feeding, and when hiccups may be a sign to call your pediatrician.
Quick Answer: Are Newborn Hiccups Normal?
Yes. Newborn hiccups are common and usually harmless. Many babies hiccup from time to time, especially after feeding. A short episode that goes away on its own and does not bother your baby is typically not a concern.
Newborn hiccups may happen because:
- The diaphragm contracts suddenly.
- Your baby swallows air during feeding.
- Your baby drinks too quickly.
- Your baby’s stomach becomes very full.
- Your baby needs to burp.
- Mild reflux or spit-up is involved.
- Your baby’s nervous and digestive systems are still maturing.
If your baby is feeding well, breathing normally, gaining weight, having enough wet diapers, and seems comfortable overall, occasional hiccups are usually part of normal baby life.
What Causes Hiccups in Newborns?
Hiccups happen when the diaphragm, a large muscle below the lungs, contracts suddenly. This quick contraction causes the vocal cords to close briefly, creating the familiar hiccup sound.
In adults, hiccups may be triggered by eating too fast, drinking carbonated beverages, sudden temperature changes, or irritation around the stomach. In newborns, the common triggers are simpler: milk, air, feeding speed, a full belly, and developing digestion.
Feeding Too Fast
If milk flows quickly, your baby may gulp, swallow extra air, and fill the stomach faster than expected. A stretched, full stomach can press near the diaphragm and trigger hiccups.

Swallowing Air
Babies may swallow air during breastfeeding or bottle-feeding. This can happen if the latch is shallow, the bottle nipple flow is too fast, the nipple is not filled with milk, or the baby is crying and feeding at the same time.
Overfeeding or a Very Full Stomach
Newborn stomachs are small. When the stomach becomes very full, it may press upward and contribute to hiccups or spit-up. This does not mean every hiccup is from overfeeding, but feeding volume and pace are worth watching.
Reflux or Spit-Up
Many newborns spit up because the muscle between the stomach and esophagus is still developing. Mild reflux can sometimes come with hiccups, burping, or discomfort. Occasional spit-up is common, but frequent distress, poor weight gain, forceful vomiting, or feeding refusal should be discussed with your pediatrician.
Do Hiccups Hurt Newborns?
Most newborn hiccups do not hurt. Your baby may hiccup and stay calm, continue resting, or even sleep through it. In many cases, parents feel more worried than the baby feels bothered.
However, some babies become annoyed if hiccups interrupt feeding or make them feel unsettled. If your baby cries, arches, pulls away from feeds, spits up a lot, or seems uncomfortable every time hiccups happen, it is worth looking at feeding patterns and asking your pediatrician for advice.
How Long Do Newborn Hiccups Last?
Many newborn hiccup episodes last only a few minutes. Some may last longer and still be harmless if your baby is comfortable. Hiccups often stop on their own without treatment.
A practical parent rule is this: if your baby is breathing normally, has normal color, and seems relaxed, you usually do not need to do much. If hiccups interrupt a feed, pause feeding, help your baby burp or relax, then continue when they are ready.
What to Do When Your Newborn Has Hiccups
You do not need to “fix” every hiccup. But if your baby seems bothered, these gentle steps may help.
1. Pause the Feeding
If hiccups begin during a feed, stop for a short break. Continuing while your baby is fussing may cause more air swallowing, which can make discomfort worse.
2. Try Burping
Burping helps release swallowed air. You can hold your baby upright against your shoulder, sit your baby on your lap while supporting the chest and head, or lay your baby tummy-down across your lap with the head higher than the chest.
Use gentle pats or slow rubbing. Hard patting is not necessary. If no burp comes after a few minutes and your baby seems comfortable, continue feeding or take a quiet break.
3. Hold Baby Upright
Keeping your baby upright can help digestion and may reduce pressure on the diaphragm. After feeding, many babies do well with 10 to 20 minutes of upright holding before being placed down.
4. Help Baby Relax
Hiccups often pass when a baby settles. Try a calm voice, gentle rocking, skin-to-skin contact, or slow back rubbing. If your baby uses a pacifier, sucking may help some babies relax, but do not use it to delay a needed feed.
5. Resume Feeding Slowly
If your baby still seems hungry, resume feeding after the hiccups calm or after a short break. Use a slower pace, pause often, and watch for signs that your baby is full.
What Not to Do for Newborn Hiccups
Adult hiccup tricks are not safe for babies. Avoid any method that startles, restricts breathing, or gives your baby something inappropriate for their age.
- Do not scare your baby to stop hiccups.
- Do not pull the tongue.
- Do not give water to a newborn.
- Do not give sugar, honey, lemon, or herbal remedies.
- Do not hold your baby’s breath.
- Do not make your baby breathe into a paper bag.
- Do not press on the soft spot, chest, or belly.
- Do not use gripe water or supplements without asking your pediatrician.
- Do not put cereal in a bottle to reduce hiccups.
Newborn hiccups almost always need patience, not tricks. If hiccups seem severe or unusual, medical advice is safer than home remedies.
How to Prevent Hiccups During Feeding
You may not be able to prevent every hiccup, but you can reduce common triggers by adjusting feeding rhythm, latch, bottle flow, and positioning.
Feed Before Baby Is Extremely Hungry
A very hungry baby may gulp, cry, latch frantically, or swallow more air. Feeding earlier, when your baby shows early hunger cues, may lead to calmer feeds.
Early hunger cues include:
- Rooting
- Sucking on hands
- Opening the mouth
- Turning toward the breast or bottle
- Becoming more alert and active
Crying is often a late hunger cue. If possible, begin feeding before your baby reaches that stage.
Use Feeding Pauses
Short pauses can slow gulping and reduce swallowed air. For bottle-fed babies, try pausing every few minutes or around halfway through the bottle. For breastfed babies, you can burp when switching breasts or whenever your baby pulls off and seems unsettled.
Check Bottle Nipple Flow
If milk flows too quickly, your baby may gulp, cough, leak milk, or pull away. If it flows too slowly, your baby may work hard, become frustrated, and swallow air. Use a nipple flow that matches your baby’s age and feeding skill.
Keep the Bottle Nipple Filled With Milk
When bottle-feeding, try to keep the nipple filled with milk rather than air. This may reduce air swallowing and improve feeding comfort.
Review Breastfeeding Latch
A shallow latch can lead to clicking sounds, air swallowing, nipple pain, and inefficient feeding. If feeds are painful or your baby often seems unsettled at the breast, a lactation consultant can help check latch and milk transfer.
The Feeding Pattern Check: A Helpful Parent Tool
When hiccups happen often, track the pattern for a few days. This can help you understand whether hiccups are related to speed, volume, position, or reflux.
| Question | What It May Suggest | What to Try |
|---|---|---|
| Do hiccups happen mostly during feeding? | Baby may be swallowing air or drinking quickly. | Pause more often, burp, and check latch or nipple flow. |
| Do hiccups happen after large feeds? | Baby may have a very full stomach. | Try smaller, calmer feeds if your pediatrician agrees. |
| Do hiccups come with spit-up? | Mild reflux or overfullness may be involved. | Hold baby upright after feeds and discuss frequent symptoms with your doctor. |
| Do hiccups happen after crying? | Baby may have swallowed extra air. | Calm baby before feeding and start feeds earlier when possible. |
| Does baby seem distressed every time? | There may be feeding discomfort or reflux. | Ask your pediatrician or lactation consultant for guidance. |
This simple pattern check can turn vague worry into useful information. It is especially helpful if you need to describe symptoms to your pediatrician.
Newborn Hiccups, Burping, and Spit-Up: How They Connect
Hiccups, burping, and spit-up often appear in the same newborn stage because they are all connected to feeding and digestion.
- Burping releases swallowed air.
- Hiccups happen when the diaphragm contracts suddenly.
- Spit-up happens when milk comes back up from the stomach.
A baby can have hiccups without needing to burp. A baby can spit up without being sick. A baby can also swallow air without showing discomfort right away. Newborn digestion is still learning how to work smoothly.
Try not to panic over one messy feed. Instead, watch trends: feeding comfort, diaper output, weight gain, breathing, and overall behavior.

Do Hiccups Mean Baby Has Reflux?
Not always. Hiccups alone do not mean your baby has reflux disease. Many healthy babies hiccup and spit up occasionally.
Reflux may be more likely to need medical attention if hiccups come with:
- Frequent painful crying during or after feeds
- Back arching with distress
- Refusing feeds
- Poor weight gain
- Forceful vomiting
- Coughing, choking, or color changes during feeds
- Blood in spit-up or stool
If your baby has these signs, call your pediatrician. Reflux symptoms can overlap with feeding issues, allergies, or other medical concerns, so it is best to get individualized guidance.
Can Hiccups Happen While Baby Sleeps?
Yes, some babies hiccup while drowsy or sleeping. If your baby is breathing normally, has normal color, and is in a safe sleep position, hiccups alone are usually not an emergency.
Keep sleep safety consistent. Place your baby on their back for sleep, use a firm and flat sleep surface, and keep the sleep space free of pillows, loose blankets, bumpers, and toys.
If your baby often hiccups after night feeds, keep the routine calm and low-stimulation. Burp gently, hold upright briefly if needed, and return your baby to a safe sleep space once settled. A bedside smart baby crib can make it easier to respond to small feeding cues while still giving your baby a separate sleep space.
Nighttime Hiccups: How to Keep Things Calm
Nighttime hiccups can feel harder because parents are tired and the room is quiet. Try not to turn hiccups into a long, bright, stimulating wake-up unless your baby truly needs care.
A simple nighttime plan:
- Pause and observe your baby’s breathing and comfort.
- If hiccups started during feeding, pause the feed.
- Burp gently or hold upright.
- Keep lights dim and voices quiet.
- Resume feeding slowly if your baby is still hungry.
- Place your baby back in a safe sleep space when calm.
For babies who settle with gentle motion before sleep, a smart cradle may support a calmer routine when used according to product instructions and safe sleep guidance.
How Hiccups Affect Diaper Changes and Daily Care
Hiccups themselves do not usually change diaper patterns, but the same feeding issues that trigger hiccups—air swallowing, fast feeding, spit-up, and digestion changes—can also make daily care feel messier. A baby may spit up after a feed, need a clothing change, or become fussy during diaper changes.
Keeping feeding and changing supplies organized can make these moments easier. A portable changing table can help keep burp cloths, wipes, diapers, clean clothes, and creams close by during the newborn stage.
For families who prefer a more complete nursery setup, diaper changing tables with storage can make it easier to handle spit-up, diaper leaks, and quick changes without searching for supplies while holding a fussy baby.
Are Hiccups Different in Breastfed and Bottle-Fed Babies?
Both breastfed and bottle-fed babies can get hiccups. The triggers may look slightly different.
For Breastfed Babies
Hiccups may happen if milk lets down quickly, baby latches shallowly, or baby swallows air while trying to keep up with the flow. Burping between sides, trying a more laid-back position, or getting latch support may help.
For Bottle-Fed Babies
Hiccups may happen if the nipple flow is too fast, the bottle angle allows air into the nipple, or baby drinks quickly without pauses. Paced bottle feeding and regular burping may help reduce air swallowing.
Neither feeding method prevents hiccups completely. The goal is comfort and good milk transfer, not a hiccup-free baby.
Common Newborn Hiccup Myths
Myth 1: Hiccups Always Mean Baby Is Cold
Temperature changes may play a role sometimes, but hiccups usually relate more to the diaphragm, feeding, air swallowing, or digestion. Do not overbundle your baby just because of hiccups.
Myth 2: Hiccups Mean Baby Needs Water
Newborns should not be given water unless a healthcare provider specifically instructs you. Breast milk or formula provides the fluid and nutrition they need.
Myth 3: Hiccups Mean Baby Is Overfed Every Time
A full stomach can trigger hiccups, but not every hiccup means your baby ate too much. Look at the full pattern: volume, feeding speed, spit-up, comfort, and weight gain.
Myth 4: Hiccups Must Be Stopped Immediately
Most hiccups stop on their own. If your baby is calm, you may not need to do anything.
When to Call the Pediatrician
Newborn hiccups are usually harmless, but some situations deserve medical advice.
Call your pediatrician if your baby:
- Has hiccups that interfere with feeding often
- Seems uncomfortable or in pain during hiccups
- Has frequent forceful vomiting
- Spits up large amounts repeatedly
- Is not gaining weight as expected
- Has fewer wet diapers than usual
- Coughs, chokes, wheezes, or changes color during feeds
- Refuses feeds or becomes very sleepy
- Has fever or seems unwell
- Has persistent hiccups that concern you
Trust your instincts. If something feels different from your baby’s normal pattern, it is okay to ask for help.
Newborn Hiccup Relief Checklist
Use this quick checklist when hiccups start:
- Pause the feed if hiccups happen while eating.
- Hold your baby upright.
- Try gentle burping.
- Check whether baby is calm or distressed.
- Resume feeding slowly if baby is still hungry.
- Keep baby upright briefly after feeds.
- Avoid unsafe adult hiccup remedies.
- Track patterns if hiccups happen often.
Final Thoughts
Newborn hiccups are common, usually harmless, and often connected to feeding, swallowed air, a full stomach, or normal diaphragm development. In most cases, they pass on their own within a few minutes and do not require treatment.
If your baby gets hiccups during feeding, pause, help them burp, hold them upright, and resume slowly when they are calm. To reduce hiccups, feed before your baby becomes extremely hungry, use regular pauses, check bottle flow or latch, and avoid overfeeding.
Most importantly, avoid unsafe home remedies. Do not give water, sugar, honey, or adult hiccup tricks to a newborn. If hiccups come with poor feeding, pain, poor weight gain, forceful vomiting, breathing changes, fever, or signs of dehydration, call your pediatrician. Hiccups are usually simple, but your peace of mind matters too.
FAQ: Newborn Hiccups
Why do newborns get hiccups?
Newborns get hiccups when the diaphragm contracts suddenly. This may happen after feeding, swallowing air, drinking too fast, having a full stomach, or experiencing mild reflux.
Are newborn hiccups normal?
Yes. Newborn hiccups are very common and usually harmless. If your baby is comfortable, breathing normally, and feeding well, occasional hiccups are usually not a concern.
How do I stop newborn hiccups?
You can pause feeding, burp your baby, hold them upright, help them relax, and resume feeding slowly if they are still hungry. Many hiccups also stop on their own without treatment.
Should I give my newborn water for hiccups?
No. Newborns should not be given water for hiccups unless a healthcare provider specifically tells you to. Breast milk or formula is the right fluid for young babies.
Can hiccups mean my baby has reflux?
Hiccups alone do not mean reflux disease. However, if hiccups come with frequent painful crying, arching, poor feeding, poor weight gain, or forceful vomiting, ask your pediatrician.
Can babies sleep with hiccups?
Some babies hiccup while sleepy or asleep. If your baby is breathing normally, has normal color, and is in a safe sleep space, hiccups alone are usually not dangerous.
Do bottle-fed babies get hiccups more often?
Some bottle-fed babies may swallow more air if the nipple flow is too fast or if air enters the nipple. Paced feeding, proper bottle angle, and regular burping may help.
When should I worry about newborn hiccups?
Call your pediatrician if hiccups interfere with feeding, last unusually long, cause distress, or come with vomiting, poor weight gain, fewer wet diapers, coughing, choking, color changes, fever, or unusual sleepiness.