Few things tug at the heart like a sobbing toddler clinging to your leg at nursery drop-off. It is exhausting and upsetting, and it can leave you wracked with guilt all day. But separation anxiety is a normal, healthy stage, and there is plenty you can do to make those goodbyes easier for both of you.
Why it happens
Separation anxiety is actually a sign of a secure, loving bond. Your child has learned that you are their safe person, and being apart from you feels genuinely worrying to them. It is extremely common in the toddler and preschool years and tends to come and go, often flaring after holidays, illness or any change in routine.
Before drop-off
- Talk it up gently. Mention nursery positively in the days before, and read books about starting nursery so it feels familiar.
- Send a comfort object if your setting allows it, such as a small soft toy or something of yours that smells of home.
- Prepare the night before so the morning is calm, not rushed, as a frantic start makes the goodbye harder.
The goodbye itself
The single most important thing is to keep goodbyes short, warm and confident. A long, anxious lingering goodbye actually makes things worse, because it signals that there is something to worry about. Develop a quick goodbye ritual, perhaps a special handshake, two kisses and a wave at the window, then hand your child to a familiar member of staff and go. Never sneak off while they are distracted, as that can make them more anxious and clingy, since they learn you might vanish at any moment.
What happens after you leave
Here is the reassuring part: most children settle within minutes of the parent leaving. If you are worried, ask staff to message you or simply ask how the morning went at pick-up. Nursery teams see this every single day and are very good at comforting and distracting upset little ones.
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Helping at home
Playing peekaboo and hide-and-seek with younger toddlers helps them learn the powerful lesson that things, and people, come back. Keep your own goodbyes around the house light and confident too. And if the anxiety seems severe, prolonged or is getting worse rather than better, have a chat with your health visitor or GP for reassurance and advice.
Common questions
How long does toddler separation anxiety last?
It comes and goes through the toddler and preschool years and often flares after holidays, illness or routine changes. For most children it eases as they grow more confident that you always come back.
Should I sneak out at nursery drop-off?
No. Sneaking off can make a child more anxious and clingy, because they learn you might disappear without warning. A short, confident goodbye ritual works far better.
Is it bad to leave my toddler crying at drop-off?
It is hard, but most children settle within minutes of you leaving. A warm, brief goodbye handed to a familiar staff member is kinder than a long, anxious one. Nursery staff are very experienced at comforting upset children.
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