Starting solids at 6 months is an exciting milestone, but it can also feel confusing. One parent may tell you to begin with rice cereal. Another may suggest avocado, sweet potato, eggs, or baby-led weaning. You may wonder how much food to offer, which foods are safest, how to use a high chair properly, and whether your baby is actually ready.
The good news is that starting solids does not need to be complicated. At around 6 months, many babies are developmentally ready to explore foods other than breast milk or formula. In the beginning, solids are less about “finishing a meal” and more about learning new textures, practicing oral motor skills, building comfort with food, and gradually adding important nutrients such as iron and zinc.
This guide explains how to start solids at 6 months, what first foods to try, how to set up a safe high chair routine, what choking hazards to avoid, and how to keep mealtimes calm for both you and your baby.
When Is a Baby Ready to Start Solids?
Many babies are ready for solid foods at about 6 months, but age is only one part of readiness. Your baby should also show signs that their body can handle the new skill of eating from a spoon or self-feeding soft foods.
Look for these readiness signs:
- Good head and neck control
- Ability to sit with support
- Interest in food when others are eating
- Opening their mouth when food is offered
- Reduced tongue-thrust reflex, meaning food is not immediately pushed out every time
- Ability to move food from the front of the mouth toward the back
If your baby turns away, cries, cannot sit with support, or consistently pushes food out, pause and try again later. Waiting a week or two is not a failure. It simply means your baby may need more time.
Why 6 Months Matters
By around 6 months, babies begin needing more nutrients than milk alone can provide, especially iron. Iron stores built during pregnancy gradually decline, and babies need iron-rich foods to support growth, brain development, and healthy blood.
This is why first foods should not be only fruits and vegetables. Soft fruits and vegetables are helpful, but they should be balanced with iron-rich options such as:
- Iron-fortified infant cereal
- Pureed or very soft meat
- Mashed beans or lentils
- Eggs, if prepared safely
- Soft fish with bones carefully removed
- Iron-rich foods paired with vitamin C foods, such as sweet potato or fruit puree
A helpful way to think about first foods is this: every spoonful is small, so nutrient density matters. Babies do not eat large amounts at first, which makes iron-rich and protein-rich foods especially valuable.

Breast Milk or Formula Still Comes First
When solids begin, breast milk or formula remains your baby’s main source of nutrition. In the first weeks of solids, your baby may eat only a teaspoon or two. That is normal.
A simple routine is to offer milk first, then solids a little later when your baby is calm but not too full. If your baby is extremely hungry, they may become frustrated with the slow pace of spoon-feeding. If they are completely full, they may have little interest in exploring food.
Try this rhythm:
- Offer breast milk or formula.
- Wait a short time.
- Place your baby safely in the high chair.
- Offer a tiny amount of food.
- Stop when your baby turns away, closes their mouth, cries, or loses interest.
At this stage, your job is to offer safe foods. Your baby’s job is to decide how much to eat.
High Chair Safety Basics
A safe feeding setup matters as much as the food itself. Babies should eat seated upright, alert, and supervised. Do not feed your baby while they are lying down, reclining too far back, crawling, playing, or sitting in a car seat outside of travel.
Choose a Safe High Chair Setup
- Use a high chair with a stable base.
- Secure your baby with the harness every time.
- Keep the chair on a flat surface.
- Do not place the high chair near counters, tables, cords, or hot drinks.
- Keep your baby’s feet supported if possible.
- Stay within arm’s reach while your baby eats.
Foot support is an often-overlooked detail. When a baby’s feet dangle, they may feel less stable and work harder to balance. A stable seated position helps babies focus on chewing, swallowing, and exploring food instead of trying to hold their body upright.
The 90-90-90 Feeding Position
A useful feeding position is the “90-90-90” setup:
- Hips supported at about 90 degrees
- Knees bent comfortably
- Feet resting on a footrest or stable surface
Your baby does not need perfect posture, but they should be upright, supported, and able to bring their head forward slightly. This position supports safer swallowing and better control.
Best First Foods for 6-Month-Old Babies
There is no single required first food. Many babies can begin with a variety of soft, simple foods. The best first foods are easy to swallow, nutrient-rich, and prepared safely.
| Food Type | Examples | How to Serve |
|---|---|---|
| Iron-rich foods | Iron-fortified cereal, meat puree, lentils, beans | Smooth, mashed, or thinned with breast milk, formula, or water |
| Vegetables | Sweet potato, carrot, peas, squash | Cook until very soft, then mash or puree |
| Fruits | Banana, avocado, pear, apple | Serve mashed, pureed, or cooked until soft when needed |
| Protein foods | Egg, fish, chicken, tofu | Soft, moist, finely mashed, or prepared in baby-safe pieces |
| Dairy foods | Plain yogurt, soft cheese | Use unsweetened options; avoid cow’s milk as a drink before age one |
Do not add salt, sugar, honey, or strong seasonings. Babies are learning the natural taste and texture of food. Simple foods are enough.
Purees vs. Baby-Led Weaning: Which Is Better?
Parents often feel pressured to choose one method: purees or baby-led weaning. In real life, many families use a combination.
Purees can be helpful because they are smooth, easy to control, and familiar for parents. Soft finger foods can help babies practice grasping, self-feeding, and texture exploration when they are developmentally ready.
You do not have to choose one forever. You can offer mashed sweet potato one day, a soft avocado strip another day, and an iron-rich puree the next. The goal is safe variety, not loyalty to one method.
How Much Solid Food Should a 6-Month-Old Eat?
At first, very little. Start with 1 to 2 teaspoons once a day. Some babies eat more quickly, while others need time to understand what food is.
A simple progression may look like this:
- Week 1: 1 small meal per day, a few tastes
- Weeks 2–3: Gradually increase the amount if baby is interested
- After a few weeks: Try 1 to 2 small meals per day
- Later infancy: Move toward more regular meals as your baby grows
Do not force “one more bite.” Babies communicate fullness by turning away, closing their mouth, leaning back, pushing food away, fussing, or losing interest. Respecting these cues helps build a healthier feeding relationship.
How to Introduce New Foods Safely
When starting solids, introduce one new single-ingredient food at a time. This makes it easier to notice whether a food causes a reaction.
A practical approach is:
- Offer one new food in the morning or early afternoon.
- Keep the portion small.
- Watch for rash, vomiting, diarrhea, swelling, coughing, wheezing, or unusual sleepiness.
- Wait a few days before adding another new food if your pediatrician recommends this approach.
- Keep tolerated foods in the rotation instead of trying something new every single meal.
If your baby has severe eczema, a known food allergy, or a family history that concerns you, ask your pediatrician how to introduce common allergens such as peanut, egg, dairy, wheat, soy, fish, or shellfish.
Allergens: What Parents Should Know
Older advice often told parents to delay allergenic foods. Current guidance is different for many babies. Once your baby is ready for solids, common allergens can often be introduced in baby-safe forms, unless your pediatrician recommends a specific plan.
Safe forms matter. For example:
- Do not offer whole peanuts.
- Do not give thick chunks of peanut butter.
- Thin smooth peanut butter with warm water, breast milk, or formula.
- Offer well-cooked egg in a soft texture.
- Make fish soft, moist, and carefully checked for bones.
Introduce allergens when your baby is healthy, not during illness, fever, or a major routine disruption. Offer a small amount first, then observe.
Choking vs. Gagging: Know the Difference
Gagging is common when babies learn to eat. It may look scary, but it is often part of learning how to move food around the mouth. Choking is different and requires immediate action.
| Gagging | Choking |
|---|---|
| Baby may cough, sputter, or make noise | Baby may be silent or unable to cry |
| Baby may push food forward with the tongue | Baby may struggle to breathe |
| Color usually stays normal | Lips or face may change color |
| Often improves as baby learns | Needs emergency response |
Parents and caregivers should learn infant choking first aid before starting solids. This is one of the most important safety steps you can take.
Foods to Avoid When Starting Solids
Some foods are unsafe for babies because they increase the risk of choking, illness, or too much salt or sugar.
- Honey before 12 months
- Whole cow’s milk as a drink before 12 months
- Whole grapes
- Popcorn
- Whole nuts and seeds
- Hot dog rounds
- Hard raw vegetables
- Hard apple chunks
- Sticky spoonfuls of nut butter
- Hard candy or gummy candy
- Foods with added salt or sugar
- Juice for babies under 12 months
Also avoid putting cereal or other foods in a bottle unless your child’s doctor specifically recommends it for a medical reason. Bottles are for breast milk, formula, or water when age-appropriate—not for thickened meals.
What About Water?
At around 6 months, small sips of water can be introduced with meals. Water should not replace breast milk or formula. Think of it as practice with a cup and a way to support mealtime learning.
Use an open cup, straw cup, or small training cup depending on your baby’s ability. Offer only small amounts. Too much water can interfere with milk intake, so keep it modest.
How to Build a Calm First-Meals Routine
A calm routine helps babies learn what to expect. You do not need a formal schedule, but repeating the same steps can reduce stress.
- Choose a time when your baby is awake and not overly hungry.
- Wash your baby’s hands and your hands.
- Seat your baby upright in the high chair.
- Offer a small amount of food.
- Pause often and watch your baby’s cues.
- Stop before your baby becomes overtired or upset.
- Clean up gently and move on with the day.
Mess is part of learning. Babies explore food through sight, touch, smell, and taste. Smearing yogurt, dropping a spoon, or squeezing banana is not bad behavior. It is sensory learning.

Set Up Your Feeding and Cleanup Zone
Starting solids adds a new kind of mess to daily life. Food may end up on the high chair, floor, bib, clothes, hands, hair, and sometimes the diaper area later.
Keep a simple cleanup zone nearby with:
- Wipes or damp cloths
- Extra bibs
- A washable floor mat
- A spare outfit
- A small laundry basket
- Diaper supplies for after-meal changes
A portable changing table can make post-meal cleanup easier if your baby often needs a clothing or diaper change after solids. For families who prefer a dedicated nursery setup, diaper changing tables with storage can help keep wipes, clean clothes, creams, and extra bibs organized.
How Starting Solids Can Change Diapers
Do not be surprised if your baby’s diapers change after starting solids. Stool may become thicker, smell stronger, or change color depending on what your baby eats. You may even see small pieces of undigested food as your baby’s digestive system adjusts.
Some changes are normal, but call your pediatrician if your baby has persistent watery diarrhea, blood in the stool, repeated vomiting, signs of dehydration, or symptoms that worry you.
If you notice more frequent diaper irritation after solids, clean gently, pat dry, and use barrier cream when needed. If you are deciding whether your current setup still works for more frequent cleanup, this guide on a changing nappy table can help you compare practical options for daily care.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Starting before baby is ready: Wait for readiness signs, not just age.
- Feeding in a reclined position: Keep baby upright and supported.
- Offering unsafe textures: Avoid round, hard, sticky, or large pieces.
- Replacing too much milk too soon: Breast milk or formula still matters most early on.
- Forcing bites: Respect fullness cues.
- Only offering sweet foods: Include vegetables, proteins, grains, and iron-rich foods.
- Giving up after one rejection: Babies often need repeated exposure to accept new foods.
Simple First-Week Solids Plan
Here is a gentle example for the first week. Adjust based on your baby’s readiness and your pediatrician’s advice.
| Day | Food Idea | Serving Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Iron-fortified infant oatmeal | Thin with breast milk, formula, or water. |
| Day 2 | Same food | Offer a tiny amount and watch for tolerance. |
| Day 3 | Same food | Increase slightly only if baby is interested. |
| Day 4 | Mashed sweet potato | Cook until soft and mash smooth. |
| Day 5 | Same food | Keep the texture soft and simple. |
| Day 6 | Mashed avocado | Serve smooth or lightly mashed. |
| Day 7 | Return to a tolerated food | Repeat familiar foods to build comfort. |
This plan is only an example. Your baby may move faster or slower. The important part is safety, patience, and steady exposure.
Final Thoughts
Starting solids at 6 months is not about creating perfect meals. It is about helping your baby learn a new skill safely. Begin when your baby shows readiness signs, use an upright high chair position, start with small amounts, include iron-rich foods, and avoid choking hazards.
Some babies love food right away. Others need time. Both can be normal. Stay patient, follow your baby’s cues, and remember that early meals are practice. With a safe setup and simple foods, starting solids can become a joyful part of your baby’s daily routine.
FAQ: Starting Solids at 6 Months
Can babies start solids at 6 months?
Many babies can start solids at around 6 months if they show readiness signs such as good head control, sitting with support, interest in food, and the ability to swallow food instead of pushing it out.
What should my baby’s first food be?
There is no single required first food. Good options include iron-fortified infant cereal, pureed meat, mashed beans, lentils, avocado, sweet potato, banana, or other soft single-ingredient foods.
How much solid food should a 6-month-old eat?
Start with 1 to 2 teaspoons once a day. Some babies want more quickly, while others need many tries before they swallow much. Breast milk or formula should still be the main nutrition source.
Should I give solids before or after milk?
In the beginning, many babies do better with milk first, followed by solids a little later. This prevents frustration from hunger while still giving your baby a chance to explore food.
Can I start with baby-led weaning?
Some families use baby-led weaning, some use purees, and many use both. The key is to offer soft, safe textures, keep your baby upright, supervise closely, and avoid choking hazards.
What foods should babies avoid when starting solids?
Avoid honey before 12 months, whole cow’s milk as a drink before 12 months, whole grapes, popcorn, nuts, hard raw vegetables, hot dog rounds, sticky nut butter, candy, and foods with added salt or sugar.
How do I know if my baby is full?
Your baby may be full if they turn away, close their mouth, lean back, push food away, fuss, or lose interest. Do not force bites. Respecting fullness cues helps your baby build a healthy relationship with food.
Is gagging normal when starting solids?
Some gagging can be normal as babies learn to move food in their mouth. Choking is different and may be silent or affect breathing. Parents and caregivers should learn infant choking first aid before starting solids.