Why Kids Fight Sleep Even When They’re Exhausted
It’s one of the more baffling things about children: kids fight sleep even when they’re clearly exhausted. Eyes glazed, yawning constantly, barely able to hold themselves upright — and yet the moment you suggest bed, they find a sudden reserve of energy to resist it.
There are specific reasons this happens, and they’re mostly physiological, not behavioural.
The Overtired Paradox
When a child gets overtired, their body responds by releasing cortisol — a stress hormone that acts as a stimulant. This is the body’s way of keeping itself awake when it needs to function. The result is a child who is exhausted but wired, who can’t settle even though everything in their body is signalling that they need sleep.
This is why putting an overtired child to bed often produces more resistance than putting a moderately tired child to bed. The window for easier settling is before the overtired stage kicks in — which is usually earlier than most parents expect.
FOMO Is Real
Children between 5 and 12 are acutely aware that the household keeps running after they go to bed. Parents are still up. Things are still happening. Asking them to opt out of the rest of the day requires them to accept missing whatever comes next.
For curious, sociable, or anxious children, this is genuinely uncomfortable. The resistance to sleep isn’t just about not wanting to stop — it’s about not wanting to be excluded.
Simple reassurance helps: “Nothing interesting happens after you go to bed. It’s just boring adult stuff.” Said consistently and believably, it reduces the pull of FOMO over time.
The Routine Has No Clear Ending
If bedtime negotiations stretch out and there’s no clear signal that the interaction is over, children will continue engaging as long as engagement is available. The bedtime routine needs a defined, consistent ending — the same goodbye, the same words, the same actions — that signals clearly: this is done now.
Without that clear ending, the child has no cue that sleep is the next thing. They’re waiting for a signal that never comes.
Their Bedtime Is Too Early
A child who is put to bed before they’re physiologically tired will resist sleep. It’s not defiance. Their body genuinely isn’t ready. Sleep pressure needs to build to a sufficient level before the brain is ready to initiate sleep.
If your child consistently resists for 45 minutes or more after going to bed, and they’re not visibly overtired when they go in, the bedtime may simply be too early for their current developmental stage. Try shifting it 20 to 30 minutes later.
What Helps Most
Watch for the tired window — the signs of tiredness before the overtired stage. Rubbing eyes, slower movement, less talking, glazed expression. That’s the moment to start the wind-down, not the moment to put them into bed.
Keep the wind-down consistent and calm. Keep the ending of the routine brief and clear. And accept that some resistance is normal — the goal is not zero resistance, it’s less resistance and faster settling over time.
One Practical Change
If your child fights sleep consistently, move their bedtime 15 minutes earlier than you currently think is right, and start the wind-down 30 minutes before that. You’re trying to catch the tired window before overtired kicks in. Most parents are surprised by how much earlier that window actually is.

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