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Welcoming a New Sibling: 7 Ways to Help Your Older Child Feel Special

By The Hello Storybook Team · Parents, writers & storytellersFebruary 26, 20267 min read
An older sibling gently meeting and holding a newborn baby wrapped in a soft blanket.

A new baby is a huge change for the smallest person in the house. Your older child is gaining a sibling — and, in their eyes, sharing you for the first time. A little jealousy or regression is completely normal. With a bit of preparation, you can help your firstborn feel less dethroned and more like the proud, capable big kid they're about to become.

Tell them early — and make them the big kid

Share the news in a way your child can hold. For toddlers, tie it to something concrete: "The baby will come when it's warm outside." From the first conversation, frame the role with pride — they aren't being replaced, they're being promoted to big sister or big brother.

Read books where a big kid welcomes a baby

Story is how young children rehearse big changes safely. A book where a child their age meets a new baby — and feels the messy, real mix of excited and unsure — gives them language for their own feelings. A personalized one, where the big-kid hero is them, lands even harder; that's the whole idea behind our big sister and big brother books.

Let them help (for real)

  • Give genuine jobs: choosing the going-home outfit, fetching a diaper, singing to the baby.
  • Praise the role, not just the task: "The baby loves your voice — you're such a good big brother."
  • Keep a few things that are just theirs and don't have to be shared.
Expect a little regression

Potty accidents, baby talk, clinginess — these usually mean "reassure me," not "I'm broken." Extra one-on-one time fixes more than correction does.

Protect one-on-one time

Even ten focused minutes a day — phone away, fully theirs — refills the cup that a newborn empties. Many parents keep a small "special time" ritual through the newborn months specifically to remind the older child they haven't lost you.

Plan the first meeting thoughtfully

  1. If you can, have someone else hold the baby when your older child first walks in, so your arms are free for them.
  2. Let the introduction be slow and pressure-free — no forced cuddles or kisses.
  3. A small "gift from the baby" can turn a rival into a teammate.

Give the new arrival a keepsake too

While you're preparing the big kid, it's also the perfect moment to start the baby's own story — a new-baby keepsake that captures their welcome into the family. Two books, two heroes, no one left out.

Key takeaways

  • Frame the older child as being promoted to big sister/brother, not replaced.
  • Use stories — especially personalized ones — to give them language for big feelings.
  • Give real jobs and protect daily one-on-one time to refill their cup.
  • Expect some regression; respond with reassurance rather than correction.

Frequently asked questions

How do I prepare a toddler for a new baby?+

Tell them early in concrete terms, read books about becoming a big sibling, give them real helper jobs, and protect daily one-on-one time. Frame the change as a promotion, not a loss.

Is it normal for my older child to regress after the baby arrives?+

Very. Potty accidents, baby talk, and clinginess are common bids for reassurance. Extra focused attention usually helps more than correcting the behavior.

What's a good gift for a new big sibling?+

A personalized big sister or big brother book makes your firstborn the hero of the new-baby story — a meaningful way to mark their new role.

Written by The Hello Storybook Team, Parents, writers & storytellers.

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