How Your Snoo Is Keeping Your Baby From Rolling

The Snoo is marketed as the ultimate smart bassinet, offering sleep-deprived parents the promise of longer, more restful nights. One of its key features is that it keeps babies safely on their backs, reducing the risk of SIDS. But from a physical therapy and developmental perspective, a machine responding to your baby’s needs and preventing your baby from rolling can have unintended consequences.

Let’s talk about this because I know it’s not a comfy conversation.

How the Snoo Prevents Rolling

The Snoo uses a built-in swaddle system that secures babies in place, keeping them on their backs at all times. This means that, unlike traditional bassinets, where babies can naturally start to explore movement, Snoo babies stay in a fixed position until they transition out of the bassinet.

While this might sound like a great safety feature, it also means that babies don’t get the opportunity to practice rolling—their first major gross motor milestone.

Why Rolling Matters

Rolling isn’t just a cute milestone—it’s a crucial part of motor development. When babies learn to roll, they’re:

  • Developing appropriate range of motion in their arms

  • Developing coordination between their upper and lower body

  • Strengthening their core, back, and neck muscles

  • Improving balance and spatial awareness

  • Building the foundation for crawling, sitting, and walking

By keeping babies in a position where they can’t roll, the Snoo may inadvertently delay these important skills.

The PT Perspective: The Downsides of Restricted Movement

As a physical therapist, I see many babies who have difficulty with movement patterns after prolonged time in restrictive devices. When a baby spends months in a Snoo, they may miss out on:

  • The natural process of shifting weight and using their muscles to adjust position

  • Early opportunities to push through their hands and build strength in their shoulders

  • The ability to practice head control in different positions, which is crucial for preventing head flattening (plagiocephaly) and torticollis (yes- unfortunately many of the babies I see in Snoos are the ones who get the helmets)

If babies come out of the Snoo at four months, they suddenly find themselves in a crib without the ability to move, feeling very unhappy because they haven’t been given the chance to practice.

The Responsiveness Factor: Babies Need Human Soothing

One of the selling points of the Snoo is that it responds to a baby’s fussing with increased motion and white noise. While this might help babies fall back asleep, it replaces human responsiveness with a machine.

Babies cry to communicate, not just to get back to sleep—they may be hungry, uncomfortable, or in need of connection. If a device is soothing them before a caregiver even gets the chance to respond, it can interfere with the natural attachment process, and even sometimes lead to poor weight gain in babies who really do need to eat every few hours at night.

(Yes… babies DO need to eat every few hours at night… this is normal and expected.)

So What’s the Alternative?

If you’re concerned about safe sleep and YOUR sleep but don’t want to restrict your baby’s movement, here are some options:

  • Use a traditional bassinet with a swaddle that allows for natural movement of the arms and legs.

  • Encourage supervised tummy time ALL THE TIME during the day to build strength and motor skills. Always remember to be respectful of your baby’s tummy time experience.

  • If using the Snoo, transition out of the swaddle as early as possible to allow for more natural movement… just use it like a bassinet.

Final Thoughts

It’s important to weigh the pros and cons of any baby container you purchase. While it keeps babies safely on their backs, it also prevents natural movement, which is key for healthy development. If you choose to use one, be mindful of ways to encourage movement and responsiveness in other areas of your baby’s routine.

Babies are meant to move. Giving them the opportunity to do so on a firm surface—day and night—helps them build strength, coordination, and confidence in their bodies. It also might mean they will roll exactly when they are meant to roll. Finally, they will learn that when they cry, you respond.

And that’s something no smart bassinet can replace.

Previous
Previous

Why You Should Pay For Craniosacral Therapy

Next
Next

Baby-Led Weaning: When (and How) to Start Solid Foods