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Your Family Psychiatrist is a trusted resource for individuals searching for mental health answers. Our articles help you understand mental illness, substance abuse treatment, and what to expect when working with licensed mental health professionals. 

Postpartum Insomnia

8/9/2025

24 Comments

 
Postpartum insomnia affecting a new mother
You’re not just “tired.” Postpartum insomnia is when you regularly struggling to initiate sleep or can't stay asleep when your baby is sleeping. It’s common, real, and treatable.

Quick story: At 3:17 a.m., Maya stared at the ceiling while her newborn finally slept. Her body ached, her mind raced (“Did I latch right? Did I miss a feeding?”), and every creak sounded like a cry. By sunrise, she’d slept maybe an hour, again. If this feels familiar, you’re not alone, and there’s a plan that helps.
​

What is Postpartum Insomnia?

​Postpartum insomnia means trouble falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early that results in daytime fatigue or fog. It’s different from normal newborn sleep disruptions because it persists even when you have the chance to sleep. It is often driven by stress, pain, hormonal shifts, and “wired-but-tired” hyperarousal.
​

How Common is Postpartum Insomnia

  • Across the first 6 months after delivery, about 1 in 5 new mothers meet criteria for insomnia, and around two-thirds report poor sleep quality.
  • Several studies also show that poor postpartum sleep can worsen depression and anxiety symptoms. Treating sleep helps mood. 
Mother with new baby

Why Does Postpartum Insomnia Happen

  • Hormonal change: Estrogen & progesterone drop, cortisol rhythms shift after birth.
  • Night feedings & pain: Recovery from delivery or C-section, perineal pain, breastfeeding discomfort.
  • Anxiety & hypervigilance: The brain stays “on guard,” especially if baby had any early medical needs.
  • Medical contributors: Postpartum thyroiditis (often 1–4 months after birth) can cause anxiety, palpitations, and insomnia which is worth ruling out with a simple blood test.
  • Habits & environment: Late caffeine, bright screens, irregular schedules, noisy rooms.

Why It Matters

​Good sleep protects mood, attention, and healing. It also helps to solidify memories and knowledge. Persistent insomnia increases the risk for postpartum depression and anxiety.
​

What you can do tonight (practical steps)

  • Protect one consolidated block: Aim for a 4–6-hour protected sleep window nightly while a partner or relative handles feeds and tantrums.
  • Time your last feed/pump then hand off. Use earplugs + white noise for your block.
  • Wind-down routine (20–30 min): Dim lights, warm shower, light stretch, breathing exercise.
  • Caffeine & screens: Last caffeine before 2 p.m. and park the phone outside the bedroom.
  • Daylight & movement: Morning sunlight and a short daytime walk help reset your clock.
  • Pain control: Treat postpartum pain as advised. Untreated pain fuels insomnia.

Counseling That Works

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is the gold-standard, medication-free treatment. It teaches stimulus control (retraining the bed for sleep), sleep scheduling, relaxation skills, and how to quiet “what-if” thoughts. Trials in the perinatal and postpartum period show meaningful improvements in insomnia, and treating insomnia during pregnancy can also decrease the odds of depression. Ask about a therapist trained in CBT-I.

Woman wide awake due to postpartum insomnia

Medication Options

Medication can be a short-term bridge while CBT-I and routines take hold. Life with a newborn is a significant transition period which is hard enough without insomnia.  Get individualized care with your clinician.

General safety principles
  • Use the lowest effective dose, for the shortest time, and dose right after the last evening feed to minimize infant exposure.
  • Monitor your baby for unusual sleepiness or poor feeding.
  • Do not bed-share if you’ve taken any sedating medicine.

Often-considered options:
  • “Z-drugs” (short-acting sleep aids):
    • Zolpidem and zopiclone/eszopiclone pass into breast milk in small amounts and are commonly considered for short-term use with infant monitoring. Some experts prefer these during breastfeeding while others advise caution due to limited data. This is an important discussion point with your physician.
  • Short-acting benzodiazepines:
    • Lorazepam/oxazepam are generally preferred if a benzodiazepine is needed because they’re shorter-acting and appear in low levels in milk. Always monitor the infant after use. Avoid long-acting benzodiazepines.
  • Sedating antidepressants:
    • Trazodone or mirtazapine at bedtime can help sleep and mood. Both have low milk levels in available reports. 
  • Antihistamines:
    • Doxylamine or hydroxyzine in occasional small doses may be compatible with breastfeeding but can cause infant drowsiness and might reduce milk supply early on. Use sparingly and with guidance.
  • Melatonin:
    • Data is limited. Some guidance allows cautious use with monitoring, but it isn’t first-line in breastfeeding.

Safety: Whenever you’ve taken a sedating medication, do not bed-share. The risk of sleep-related infant death is much higher when a caregiver is fatigued or has taken sedating medicines. Use a separate, safe sleep surface for baby in your room.
​

What to Watch For

Call your clinician soon if:
  • You can’t sleep most nights for 2+ weeks,
  • You feel increasing anxiety, irritability, or hopelessness, or
  • You suspect thyroid issues (racing heart, heat intolerance, tremor, insomnia).
Urgent red flags (seek same-day help or go to the ER / call 988):
  • Thoughts of harming yourself or the baby
  • Mania or psychosis (feeling wired with no sleep, racing thoughts, paranoia, hearing/seeing things, severe confusion). Postpartum psychosis is rare (~1–2 in 1,000 births) but a medical emergency.

​24/7 help:
Call/text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline: 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262)
Postpartum insomnia is common and treatable. With the right mix of structure, support, and targeted therapy, most new parents sleep better within days to weeks. If you’re struggling, you deserve help now.  Contact your family physician or schedule an appointment with us quickly.
baby sleeping in a halloween outfit
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