You're Not the Only One Washing Sheets at 6 AM
It's early morning. You hear the familiar rustle of your 5-year-old climbing out of bed, and you already know. The sheets are wet again. Bedwetting at age 5 is one of those things nobody talks about at pickup, but roughly 15 to 20 percent of 5-year-olds still wet the bed. That's about one in every five kids in your child's kindergarten class.
If you're wondering whether something is wrong, take a breath. Most of the time, there's nothing to fix. But there are moments when it makes sense to call your pediatrician. Here's how to tell the difference.
Why Bedwetting at 5 Is Still Considered Normal
Nighttime dryness is one of the last pieces of the potty training puzzle, and it runs on its own clock. Daytime training depends on muscle control and habit. Nighttime dryness depends on something your child can't control: their brain recognizing a full bladder signal during sleep.
Three things are usually going on with kids who still wet the bed at 5:
- The brain-bladder connection isn't fully wired yet. Their nervous system is still developing the ability to wake them when their bladder is full. This is neurological, not behavioral.
- They're deep sleepers. Some kids sleep so soundly that the "full bladder" signal never reaches the surface. This isn't a flaw. It's just how their brain works right now.
- Their bladder capacity is still catching up. A 5-year-old's bladder holds about 6 to 7 ounces. If they produce more urine overnight than their bladder can hold, they'll wet the bed.
There's also a strong genetic link. If one parent wet the bed past age 5, there's about a 40 percent chance their child will too. If both parents did, that jumps to around 70 percent.
The Numbers That Should Reassure You
Bedwetting resolves on its own for about 15 percent of affected kids each year. No intervention needed. Their bodies simply catch up.
Here's what that looks like by age:
- Age 5: 15 to 20 percent of kids wet the bed
- Age 6: About 13 percent
- Age 7: About 10 percent
- Age 8: About 4 percent
Boys are about twice as likely as girls to wet the bed at this age. Nobody knows exactly why, but the pattern is consistent across cultures. It's not about maturity or effort. It's biology.
When to Call Your Pediatrician
Most 5-year-olds who wet the bed don't need medical attention. But there are specific situations where a check-in with your doctor is worth it.
Make an appointment if your child:
- Was completely dry at night for 6 months or more and then started wetting again (this is called secondary enuresis, and it sometimes signals a UTI, stress, or other underlying issue)
- Wets during the day too, not just at night
- Complains of pain or burning when they pee
- Snores loudly or seems to stop breathing during sleep
- Is drinking way more water than usual or suddenly losing weight
- Is still wetting the bed regularly at age 7
Your pediatrician will likely do a physical exam and a simple urine test to rule out infection or other concerns. Most of the time, everything checks out fine.
What Actually Helps (Without Pressure)
You can't train a child out of bedwetting the same way you trained them to use the potty during the day. This isn't a skill they're refusing to learn. But there are things that genuinely help the process along.
Shift their fluid intake earlier
Encourage your child to drink most of their water before 4 PM. Cut back on fluids in the 2 hours before bed, but don't restrict water if they're genuinely thirsty. The goal is front-loading hydration, not creating a power struggle over a cup of water.
Build a solid bedtime bathroom routine
Have your child use the bathroom right before bed. Then, if they're still awake 20 to 30 minutes later, have them try again. This double-void technique helps empty the bladder more fully before sleep.
Skip the bladder irritants
Chocolate milk, hot cocoa, citrus juice, and anything with artificial dyes (especially red) can irritate the bladder. Try eliminating these for 2 weeks and see if the frequency drops.
Protect the mattress, protect the kid
Use a waterproof mattress protector and keep a spare set of sheets nearby. Make cleanup easy and low-drama. The less stressful a wet night is, the less your child will internalize shame about it. Check out our potty training essentials page for mattress protector recommendations.
Consider a bedwetting alarm
For kids 6 and older, bedwetting alarms are one of the most effective tools available. The alarm clips to their underwear and goes off at the first sign of moisture. Over 4 to 6 weeks, it trains the brain to recognize the full-bladder signal during sleep. Studies show success rates between 60 and 80 percent.
What to Avoid
This is just as important as what to do.
- Don't punish or shame. Your child isn't doing this on purpose. Punishment makes bedwetting worse, not better, because stress can increase the frequency.
- Don't wake them up to pee in the middle of the night unless your pediatrician specifically recommends it. Disrupted sleep doesn't help the brain-bladder connection develop.
- Don't compare them to siblings or friends. "Your sister was dry by 3" is not helpful. It's hurtful.
- Don't restrict fluids harshly. Dehydrated kids still wet the bed. They just do it with more concentrated urine.
Talking to Your Child About Bedwetting
Your 5-year-old might not bring it up, or they might be quietly mortified. Either way, they need to hear a few things from you.
Tell them it's not their fault. Use simple language: "Your body is still learning how to stay dry while you sleep. It'll get there." That's it. No lecture needed.
If they're heading to a sleepover and they're worried, consider pull-ups designed for bigger kids. Frame it as practical, not babyish: "Lots of kids use these. It's no big deal."
The single most important thing you can do is stay calm about it. Your reaction sets the tone. If you treat it like a minor inconvenience, they will too.
Key Takeaways
- Bedwetting at age 5 affects 15 to 20 percent of children and is considered normal by pediatricians.
- Nighttime dryness depends on brain development, not willpower or training. It can't be forced.
- Front-load fluids before 4 PM and use a double-void routine at bedtime to reduce wet nights.
- See your doctor if your child was dry and started wetting again, has daytime wetting, pain, or symptoms that seem new.
- Stay calm, skip the shame, and trust that your child's body will catch up on its own timeline.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I limit my 5-year-old's water intake to stop bedwetting?
Don't restrict water harshly. Instead, encourage most of their drinking before 4 PM and reduce fluids in the last 2 hours before bed. If your child is thirsty, let them drink. Dehydration doesn't prevent bedwetting, and it can cause other problems like constipation.
Is bedwetting a sign of a behavioral or emotional problem?
In the vast majority of cases, no. Primary bedwetting (meaning your child has never been consistently dry at night) is almost always developmental. However, if your child was dry for 6+ months and suddenly started wetting again, stress or a medical issue could be a factor. That's worth a pediatrician visit.
Will my child outgrow bedwetting without treatment?
Most kids do. About 15 percent of bedwetting children become dry each year without any treatment. By age 8, only about 4 percent still wet the bed. If your child is 5, time is genuinely on your side.
When should I consider a bedwetting alarm?
Most experts recommend waiting until age 6 or 7 before trying a bedwetting alarm. At that point, kids are more motivated and better able to cooperate with the process. Alarms have a 60 to 80 percent success rate over 4 to 6 weeks, making them one of the most effective non-medication options available.
Do pull-ups make bedwetting last longer?
There's no evidence that pull-ups delay nighttime dryness. If they help your child sleep through the night without shame or a 3 AM sheet change, use them. You can always transition to underwear once you see consistent signs of readiness.