Starting Solids at 6 Months: First Foods, High Chair, and Safety Basics

Starting solids at 6 months is an exciting milestone, but it can also feel overwhelming. One day your baby is only drinking breast milk or formula, and suddenly you are thinking about oatmeal, avocado, sweet potato, high chairs, choking hazards, allergens, bibs, spoons, and messy cleanup.

The good news is that starting solids does not need to be complicated. At this stage, food is not about replacing milk right away or finishing a full meal. It is about helping your baby learn a new skill: sitting upright, opening the mouth, moving food around, swallowing, touching textures, and discovering new flavors.

This guide walks you through when babies are ready for solids, what first foods to try, how to set up the high chair safely, how much food to offer, and what parents should know about choking, allergens, and cleanup.

When Can Babies Start Solids?

Many babies are ready to begin solids at around 6 months, but readiness depends on development, not just age. Some babies are eager right at 6 months. Others need a little more time to build head control, sitting strength, and feeding coordination.

Before offering first foods, look for these readiness signs:

  • Good head and neck control
  • Ability to sit upright with support
  • Interest in food when others are eating
  • Opening the mouth when food is offered
  • Bringing hands or toys to the mouth
  • Swallowing food instead of pushing everything out with the tongue

If your baby cries, turns away, slumps in the seat, pushes food out repeatedly, or seems unable to manage the texture, pause and try again later. Waiting a week or two is fine. Starting solids should feel gradual, not forced.

Why 6 Months Is an Important Feeding Stage

Around 6 months, babies begin needing more nutrients than milk alone can provide, especially iron and zinc. Iron is important for growth, brain development, and healthy blood. Since babies eat very small amounts at first, every bite should count.

This is why first foods should not be only fruit purees. Fruits are useful, but your baby also needs nutrient-dense foods such as iron-fortified infant cereal, meat, beans, lentils, eggs, and other soft protein foods prepared safely.

Think of early solids as a gentle bridge. Breast milk or formula still provides most of your baby’s nutrition, while small amounts of solid food introduce new nutrients, textures, and oral motor practice.

High Chair Setup: Safety Before the First Bite

A safe feeding position matters as much as the food itself. Your baby should eat seated upright, alert, and closely supervised. Avoid feeding solids while your baby is lying down, reclining, crawling, playing, or sitting in a car seat outside of travel.

What to Look for in a High Chair

  • Upright seat: Your baby should not recline while eating.
  • Stable base: The chair should not wobble or slide easily.
  • Secure harness: Use the straps every time.
  • Foot support: A footrest helps your baby feel more stable.
  • Easy-to-clean tray: Starting solids gets messy quickly.
  • Right fit: Your baby should not slump, slide, or lean heavily to one side.

The 90-90-90 Feeding Position

A helpful feeding position is often called the 90-90-90 position. Your baby’s hips are supported, the knees bend comfortably, and the feet rest on a footrest or stable surface. Your baby does not need perfect posture every second, but they should be upright and supported enough to focus on eating.

If your baby’s feet dangle, they may work harder to balance. Foot support gives the body a stable base, which can make reaching, chewing, swallowing, and self-feeding easier.

What Should Baby’s First Foods Be?

There is no single required first food. Many families begin with infant oatmeal, mashed vegetables, avocado, banana, or soft protein foods. What matters most is that the food is safe, soft, simple, and appropriate for your baby’s developmental stage.

Food Type Examples How to Serve
Iron-rich foods Iron-fortified oatmeal, meat puree, lentils, beans Smooth, mashed, or thinned with breast milk, formula, or water
Vegetables Sweet potato, peas, squash, carrots Cook until very soft, then mash or puree
Fruits Banana, avocado, pear, apple Serve mashed, pureed, or cooked soft when needed
Protein foods Egg, fish, chicken, tofu Cook fully and serve soft, moist, and baby-safe
Dairy foods Plain yogurt, soft cheese Choose unsweetened options; avoid cow’s milk as a drink before age one

Start with small amounts. A teaspoon or two may be plenty in the beginning. Your baby may taste, spit, smear, gag lightly, or look confused. That is part of learning.

Simple First Food Ideas for 6 Months

Here are easy first foods that work well for many babies:

  • Infant oatmeal: Mix with breast milk, formula, or water until smooth.
  • Mashed avocado: Soft, mild, and rich in healthy fats.
  • Sweet potato puree: Cook until very soft and mash smooth.
  • Mashed lentils: Cook until soft and mash with water or milk.
  • Banana mash: Easy to prepare, but best balanced with less sweet foods too.
  • Soft egg: Cook fully and serve in a texture your baby can manage.
  • Chicken and carrot puree: Blend cooked chicken with soft carrot and liquid.

Once your baby tolerates individual foods, you can combine them. For example, oatmeal with pear, sweet potato with lentils, avocado with egg, or chicken with squash can become simple early meals.

How Much Should a 6-Month-Old Eat?

At first, very little. Many babies begin with 1 to 2 teaspoons once a day. Some quickly become interested in more, while others need many exposures before they swallow much.

A gentle progression may look like this:

  • First week: 1 small meal per day, only a few tastes
  • After a few weeks: Gradually increase the amount if baby is interested
  • Later in the 6–8 month range: 1 to 2 small meals per day may work for many babies
  • By 9 months: Some babies move toward 2 to 3 small meals, depending on readiness

Milk still matters. Breast milk or formula should remain an important source of nutrition while solids are introduced gradually.

Should You Offer Milk Before or After Solids?

For many babies, it works well to offer breast milk or formula first, then try solids a little later. A baby who is extremely hungry may become frustrated with slow spoon-feeding. A baby who is completely full may not be interested in food at all.

Try this simple routine:

  1. Offer breast milk or formula.
  2. Wait a short time.
  3. Seat your baby safely in the high chair.
  4. Offer a small amount of food.
  5. Pause often and watch your baby’s cues.
  6. Stop when baby turns away, closes the mouth, cries, or loses interest.

This approach helps your baby explore food without the pressure of needing to fill up on solids right away.

Purees, Mashed Foods, or Finger Foods?

Parents often feel pressure to choose one feeding method, but many families use a mix. Smooth purees can be helpful in the beginning because they are easy to control. Mashed foods help your baby practice thicker textures. Soft finger foods can support self-feeding when your baby is ready.

You can offer:

  • Smooth purees
  • Mashed foods
  • Thicker textures
  • Very soft finger foods
  • A mix of spoon-feeding and self-feeding

The key is safety. Foods should be soft enough for your baby’s stage, served in appropriate shapes, and offered only while your baby is upright and supervised.

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 method is:

  • Offer a small amount of one new food.
  • Try new foods earlier in the day when possible.
  • Watch for rash, vomiting, diarrhea, swelling, coughing, wheezing, or unusual sleepiness.
  • Wait a few days before adding another new food if your pediatrician recommends that approach.
  • Keep tolerated foods in rotation instead of constantly starting over.

If your baby has severe eczema, a known allergy, or a history that concerns you, ask your pediatrician how to introduce common allergens such as peanut, egg, dairy, wheat, soy, sesame, fish, or shellfish.

Allergens: What Parents Should Know

Many common allergens can be introduced in baby-safe forms once your baby is ready for solids, unless your pediatrician gives different advice. The form matters more than the food name alone.

  • Do not offer whole peanuts or nuts.
  • Do not give thick spoonfuls of peanut butter.
  • Thin smooth nut butter with warm water, breast milk, or formula.
  • Serve egg fully cooked and soft.
  • Serve fish soft, moist, and carefully checked for bones.
  • Choose plain yogurt without added sugar.

Introduce allergens when your baby is healthy and you have time to observe. Start small and stay calm.

Choking Safety Basics

Choking prevention is one of the most important parts of starting solids. Your baby should always be seated upright, alert, and supervised while eating.

Avoid these choking hazards:

  • Whole grapes
  • Popcorn
  • Whole nuts and seeds
  • Hard raw vegetables
  • Hard apple chunks
  • Hot dog rounds
  • Large chunks of meat or cheese
  • Sticky spoonfuls of nut butter
  • Hard candy or gummy candy

Foods should be soft enough to mash easily or prepared in a shape and texture your baby can manage. Parents and caregivers should also learn infant choking first aid before starting solids.

Gagging vs. Choking

Gagging can be normal when babies learn to eat. It may involve coughing, sputtering, or pushing food forward with the tongue. Choking is different and may be silent.

Gagging Choking
Baby may cough or make noise Baby may be silent or unable to cry
Food may move forward in the mouth Airway may be blocked
Color usually stays normal Face or lips may change color
Often improves with practice Needs immediate emergency response

Gagging can look scary, but it is often part of learning. Choking requires quick action. Knowing the difference helps parents respond appropriately.

Foods and Drinks to Avoid Before Age One

Some foods and drinks should be avoided in the first year for safety or nutrition reasons.

  • Honey: Avoid before 12 months.
  • Cow’s milk as a main drink: Wait until after the first birthday.
  • Juice: Babies under 12 months do not need juice.
  • Added salt: Babies do not need salty foods.
  • Added sugar: Keep early foods simple and unsweetened.
  • Foods in a bottle: Do not put cereal or purees in a bottle unless your doctor specifically recommends it.

Small sips of water may be introduced with meals around the time solids begin, but water should not replace breast milk or formula.

How Starting Solids Changes Cleanup

Starting solids is messy. Food may end up on the tray, bib, floor, clothes, hair, hands, and later diapers. Your baby’s stool may become thicker, smell stronger, or change color depending on what they eat.

Set up a simple cleanup zone before the first meal. Keep damp cloths, bibs, wipes, spare clothes, and diaper supplies nearby. A portable changing table can make post-meal cleanup easier if your baby often needs a clothing or diaper change after eating.

For families who prefer a dedicated nursery setup, diaper changing tables with storage can help keep wipes, clean clothes, creams, and washable liners organized. If you are deciding whether a dedicated changing space is worth it, this guide on a changing nappy table can help you compare practical options for daily care.

Simple First-Week Solids Plan

This sample plan is only a gentle example. Adjust based on your baby’s readiness, your pediatrician’s advice, and any allergy considerations.

Day Food Idea Serving Tip
Day 1 Iron-fortified infant oatmeal Mix 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 Sweet potato Cook until soft and mash smooth.
Day 5 Same food Keep the texture soft and simple.
Day 6 Avocado Mash ripe avocado with a little liquid if needed.
Day 7 Return to a tolerated food Repeat familiar foods to build comfort.

Your baby may eat a little, a lot, or almost nothing. That is okay. Early meals are practice.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting before readiness: Wait for sitting, head control, and feeding cues.
  • Feeding in a reclined position: Keep your baby upright and supported.
  • Offering unsafe textures: Avoid round, hard, sticky, or large pieces.
  • Replacing too much milk too soon: Milk remains important early on.
  • Forcing bites: Respect turning away, closed lips, crying, or loss of interest.
  • Only offering sweet foods: Include vegetables, proteins, grains, and iron-rich foods.
  • Giving up after one rejection: Babies often need repeated exposure.

Final Thoughts

Starting solids at 6 months is not about perfect meals. It is about helping your baby learn safely. Wait for readiness signs, use a supportive high chair, begin with small amounts, include iron-rich foods, introduce new foods thoughtfully, and avoid choking hazards.

Some babies love food immediately. Others need time to touch, taste, spit, and learn. Both patterns can be normal. Stay patient, follow your baby’s cues, and keep meals calm, safe, and low-pressure.

With the right setup and simple first foods, starting solids can become one of the most joyful new routines in your baby’s first year.

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 oatmeal, pureed meat, mashed lentils, beans, avocado, sweet potato, banana, pear, 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 an important nutrition source.

Should I give solids before or after milk?

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.

Does my baby need to sit independently before solids?

Your baby does not need to sit completely independently, but they should sit upright with support and have good head and neck control. They should not slump or recline during feeding.

What foods should babies avoid when starting solids?

Avoid honey before 12 months, cow’s milk as a main drink before 12 months, whole grapes, popcorn, nuts, hard raw vegetables, hot dog rounds, sticky nut butter chunks, juice, added salt, and added sugar.

Is gagging normal when starting solids?

Some gagging can be normal as babies learn to move food in the mouth. Choking is different and may be silent or affect breathing. Parents and caregivers should learn infant choking first aid.

How do I know if my baby is full?

Your baby may be full if they turn away, close their mouth, push food away, lean back, fuss, or lose interest. Respecting fullness cues helps your baby build a healthy relationship with food.

von Dr. Katherine Bennett – 29 Mai 2026

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