You've heard the advice a thousand times: childproof before your baby starts crawling. But when is that, exactly? And what does the science actually tell us about how babies develop mobility?
Let's get into it.
The Average Timeline
Most babies start crawling between 6 and 10 months old, with the average landing around 8 months. But "average" covers a huge range of normal. Some babies crawl at 5 months. Others skip crawling entirely and go straight to walking at 9-10 months.
Here's what the research from the World Health Organization's Multicentre Growth Reference Study tells us:
Notice those ranges. A baby who walks at 8 months and one who walks at 18 months are both completely normal.
Why This Matters for Safety
The ranges are the important part. If you wait until your baby "shows signs" of crawling to start childproofing, you're already behind. Some babies go from sitting to speed-crawling in what feels like a weekend.
The safe approach: have your basic childproofing done by 4-5 months. That gives you a buffer before even the earliest crawlers get moving.
Different Styles of Movement
Not every baby crawls the "traditional" way on hands and knees. Researchers have documented several distinct movement patterns:
All of these are normal. And all of them mean your baby can now reach things that were previously safe.
Speed Development
What catches parents off guard is how fast babies get fast. A baby who just started crawling covers maybe 10 feet per minute. Within a few weeks, that same baby can cross a room before you finish pouring your coffee.
Studies show that experienced crawlers move at about 30-40 feet per minute. That's fast enough to reach the stairs, the kitchen, or the bathroom before you can react if you're not paying attention.
The Brain-Body Connection
Here's something interesting from the research: babies don't just develop motor skills. Their risk perception develops at the same time, but much more slowly. A crawling baby has the ability to reach dangerous places but not the judgment to avoid them.
Visual cliff experiments show that experienced crawlers develop some fear of heights, but it takes weeks to months of crawling experience. New crawlers will happily crawl right off an edge.
What to Do With This Information
The science gives us a clear message: prepare early, update often, and never assume your baby can't reach something just because they couldn't yesterday.