Coral Care content is reviewed and approved by our clinical professionals so you you know you're getting verified advice.
Find effective support for developmental delays, quickly.
Concerned about your child's development?
Our free screener offers guidance and connects you with the right providers to support your child's journey.
If your child has trouble falling asleep, you've probably thought about melatonin. Maybe you've tried it. It feels natural, it's available everywhere, and it often works — at least in the short term. But a major review published in the World Journal of Pediatrics in March 2026 found that the science behind melatonin for kids is a lot thinner than the popularity of the supplement would suggest. Here's what parents should actually know.
Why Families Reach for Melatonin
Melatonin is a hormone your body produces naturally to signal that it's time to sleep. As a supplement, it's widely available, inexpensive, and perceived as safer than prescription sleep aids. For kids with autism or ADHD, who often have disrupted sleep-wake cycles, the research does support short-term use. Studies show melatonin helps these children fall asleep faster, sleep longer, and reduce the overall stress on caregivers.
It's become a reflex for many families — not because parents are careless, but because sleep deprivation is exhausting and melatonin feels like a reasonable thing to try.
What the Research Actually Says
The March 2026 review analyzed the evidence base for melatonin use in children and found something that might surprise you: the evidence is strong for children with autism and ADHD, and notably weak for everyone else.
For typically developing children — children without a neurodevelopmental diagnosis — the research is limited, inconsistent, and focused mostly on older kids. Almost no solid data exists for toddlers and young children, who are now among the fastest-growing groups of melatonin users. Most of the randomized trials that exist are short in duration, meaning researchers don't know what happens when kids use melatonin regularly over months or years.
The review also flagged something that surprised many clinicians: melatonin supplements are frequently mislabeled. Independent testing has found that the actual melatonin content in supplements often differs significantly from what's listed on the label — sometimes by a wide margin in either direction. And accidental ingestions by young children have been rising as household use has increased.
What We Don't Know Yet
The researchers raised questions that haven't been answered yet about long-term melatonin use in children: potential effects on puberty timing, immune function, metabolism, and neurological development. These aren't confirmed risks — they're unanswered questions. But given that melatonin is a hormone that plays a role in systems beyond sleep, researchers believe more caution is warranted than the current level of use suggests.
The consensus among experts is that melatonin, when used at all, should be used short-term, at low doses, and alongside behavioral sleep strategies — not instead of them.
What's Often Driving Sleep Problems in Kids
When a child has chronic trouble falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking up at appropriate times, there's almost always something going on beyond just not being tired. The most common drivers include:
Sensory sensitivities. Many children — especially those with ADHD, autism, or sensory processing differences — are highly sensitive to light, sound, touch, or body temperature at bedtime. The environment that feels fine to an adult feels overwhelming to them. This keeps their nervous system activated long after the lights go out.
Dysregulation and difficulty transitioning. Sleep requires a shift from an active, engaged state to a calm, restful one. Children who have difficulty with self-regulation — managing their own arousal levels — often struggle with this transition, especially after stimulating evenings. Screen time, excitement, and unpredictable schedules all make this harder.
Anxiety. Bedtime is often when worries surface. Children who don't have the words or emotional tools to process anxiety during the day often experience it intensely at night.
Developmental patterns. Some children are naturally predisposed to later sleep onset — a tendency that can be exacerbated by environment but isn't simply a behavioral problem that can be eliminated.
What Occupational Therapy Can Do That Melatonin Can't
Melatonin can help a child fall asleep faster tonight. It doesn't address why they're having trouble sleeping in the first place.
Occupational therapy approaches sleep as a function of the whole sensory and regulatory system. A pediatric OT evaluates how a child's nervous system processes sensory input — touch, sound, light, movement — and works with families to build a wind-down environment and routine that actually matches how that child's brain works.
This might include a specific sensory diet in the hour before bed (proprioceptive input like heavy work, bear hugs, or weighted blankets to help the nervous system downregulate), a consistent visual schedule to support transitions, adjustments to the sleep environment (lighting, noise, textures), and caregiver coaching so the whole family is aligned on the routine.
The 2025 systematic review published in Frontiers in Pediatrics found that caregiver training on sensory strategies has the strongest evidence of any sensory-based intervention — stronger than anything done in a clinic session. This is exactly the work that in-home OT is designed for, because the therapist can see your child's actual sleep environment and work within it.
When to Talk to Your Pediatrician
If your child has chronic sleep difficulties, talk to your pediatrician before starting melatonin or continuing long-term use. Ask specifically about:
- Whether there may be an underlying condition contributing to the sleep difficulty (ADHD, anxiety, sleep apnea)
- Whether a referral to a pediatric OT or behavioral sleep specialist makes sense
- If you do use melatonin, what dose is appropriate and how long to try it
Melatonin isn't dangerous for most kids in the short term. But it works best as a bridge, not a solution — and for many children, there's a better path available that addresses why sleep is hard rather than just making it easier to override.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is melatonin safe for toddlers?
The research on melatonin for toddlers without a neurodevelopmental diagnosis is limited. Most studies focus on older children, and long-term safety data is lacking for all ages. If you're considering melatonin for a young child, talk to your pediatrician first.
Does melatonin work for kids with ADHD or autism?
Yes — the research here is stronger. Studies show short-term benefits for sleep onset and duration in children with ADHD and autism. Even for these children, experts recommend using melatonin alongside behavioral sleep strategies, not as a standalone solution.
What does an OT do for sleep?
A pediatric OT evaluates how your child's sensory system affects their ability to wind down, and works with your family to build a routine and environment that supports sleep. This includes sensory-based strategies, transition supports, and caregiver coaching. It's particularly effective for children with sensory sensitivities, ADHD, or anxiety.
How do I get a referral for OT for sleep?
Ask your child's pediatrician for a referral to a pediatric occupational therapist, mentioning sleep regulation and sensory processing as the primary concern. Most major commercial insurance plans cover OT. Coral Care can also help you get matched with an in-home OT and verify your benefits before your first session.


