Ready to start potty training? This post will walk you through an entire potty training process from start to finish. Learn the ins and outs of potty training, along with tips, tricks, and thoughts to guide you along your way.
It’s time to talk about potty training
Potty training is a weird one.
I’m not going to lie or sugar coat things. I’m not going to tell you that you and your child are about to embark on a journey full of sunshine and roses. You might. But you might not.
That’s potty training. It’s a weird one.
In my humblest opinion, I think potty training is hardest on us parents – we are giving away a lot of control and power. And that’s not easy for us.
Think about how toddler eating habits and toddler sleep habits can make us go bananas.
We can’t force a kid to eat.
We can’t force them to sleep.
And it drives us bonkers (well, this parent anyways). How many times a week do you worry about how they ate or how they slept? Well, toileting is next on this list.
Potty training is the day you give over control of their bladder and bowels, so to speak. And it is terrifying. You’ll never love diapers more than the day you decide to potty train (wink).
I’m not trying to scare you!!
I’m not trying to be Debbie Downer.
I want you to know that your feelings (and fears) are valid. Potty training is a scary unknown, and if it’s your first potty training rodeo – this is unlike anything you’ve ever done.
The biggest secret to potty training
The biggest secret to potty training is to be prepared.
Be prepared for a shift in your daily routine. Things will go back to normal after a bit, but life as you know it is about to change. That’s not a bad thing, but you need to embrace and be ready for it.
Be prepared with all your activity supplies to be home for a few days.
Be prepared with a solid game plan, but also be prepared to call a lot of audibles. You may need to change things up as this goes forward, and that’s also okay.
Be prepared to give over a big chunk of control to your favorite tiny human.
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Ok lady, what’s your background? Why should I listen to you?
I’m just a parent with a Master’s in Early Childhood Education, a website, and a big Instagram account, so of course, take me with a grain of salt. I’m not a medical professional. Don’t substitute advice from some lady on the Internet with medical advice.
But I have potty trained three kids (all at 23 months old) and have lived to tell about it.
And I’m willing to talk about it.
Sometimes, all we need to get our wheels churning as parents, and to figure out what’s right for our kids, is to hear how someone else handled a situation and how it went for them. You may love my method, hate it, or pull out the parts that will work for you – but at least it gets you planning your potty training journey.
So that’s what I’m aiming to do here – I’m sharing how potty training went for my family, what we did, what I learned, and what I wished I’d known heading into this game.
Set the stage – pre-potty training
Like I mentioned, each of my kid’s potty trained at 23 months – but each has a different potty training story. I didn’t set out to potty train my kids super early, but that’s what happened and that’s what worked for us. They were all ready.
For my kids, here was their pre-potty training resume:
- knew body part words
- knew potty associated vocabulary words
- could hold their bladders for an hour
- would vocalize their process regarding going in a diaper
My two oldest were showing interest, but in no way self-potty trained. Both were curious and engaged. With both of them, I definitely taught them how to be potty trained from square one.
My third took the reigns and essentially self-potty trained a few weeks before turning 2. I thought that was an urban parenting myth… apparently it can happen.
He still needed a lot of help – it wasn’t some smooth sailing, without incident type process. But it gave me a new way to look at things, which is always good.
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Tip 1 – Have a potty on-hand
Don’t introduce the concept of sitting on a toilet the day you are also asking them to pee on the toilet.
That would be a lot.
Buy a toddler toilet early – we had ours out with our first born from the time he was 18 months old. He knew exactly what that potty was for…he just didn’t know how to use it.
My other two kids had the sibling bonus of always seeing that little toilet their whole lives – they never knew life without it.
It’s up to you if you want them to use a toddler sized toilet or use the real toilet (with a toddler seat adapter). We went with the toddler-sized toilet so we could take it with us if need be.
Tip 2 – Be open about potty talk
I know I know – this is hard for some and easy for others. Do what is most comfortable for you and your family but for me and mine…we have an open-door policy (if you know what I mean).
Long before potty training is even a blip on the horizon, I’m talking to my kids every time I use the loo and often narrating the process.
I know this is TMI, but this is a potty training post so technically, you agreed to this.
We want to normalize the process. We want to remove mystery. We want to make using the bathroom as stress free, easy breezy as possible.
Them being an intimate part of your toileting leading up to their toileting is more helpful than you’d think.
Tip 3 – Set them on the pot from time to time
Even before you “set the date” to potty train, start getting your toddler comfortable with the idea of sitting on the toilet.
Have them take practice sits. Encourage them to try. Again, normalize it and keep it light.
Tip 4 – Pick your date
Don’t just jump in on a whim.
Take it from someone who has accidentally jumped in to potty training three times on a whim (do as I say, not as I do…).
Pick a date. Circle it on the calendar.
This gives you time to gather supplies, make a game plan, and avoid racing to Target at 9 pm & scouring the Internet for tips at midnight (been there, done that).
It also gives you time to mentally prepare, be in a good space, and have some control over what’s about to go down.
Truth: the first three days are the hardest
But then it gets a lot easier.
My best advice: power through the first three days.
Hunker down. Potty train with all your might and with total fidelity, and don’t give up.
You can do this, and so can they. Billions of parents have walked this road before you. You will make it through it.
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Pep talk – You have to be willing to commit
Really, really commit to the process. Be confident in yourself. Be confident in them.
And really commit to being home for these first 3 days. I know this is rough. I’ve lived it. It’s hard. But plan to not leave your house with your potty training child for 3 full days. I’ll explain why in a minute.
Consider starting this process on a Friday so you have a full weekend to sit home, and potentially some company to sit with you.
Potty training can be a tough mental process for both parent AND child.
You have to be strong. Keep it together (at least in front of them). It is okay to cry in the garage. I would know.
BUT WHAT IF… what if it’s a total bust and you really think you made a mistake? Hit the brakes.
The first 72 hours
Let’s actually break this down even further and start with Day 1.
Here are the supplies I always had on hand each time I started potty training:
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- Toddler toilet
- Potty prize – I have NO problem giving an M&M for a potty
- Flushable wipes
- Pull-Ups or similar (for sleeping – we will get to this in a minute)
- Underwear (we won’t need these for a while though so definitely optional today)
- Lots of liquids
- Loose fitting pants (think sweats not leggings or jeans)
- Carpet cleaner (what? I’m being realistic! We have this little carpet cleaner for big stuff and this spray for spot cleaning)
- A can-do attitude
Day 1 of Potty Training
I set the stage the night before: “Tomorrow – no more diapers! We potty in the toilet. I will teach you. Tomorrow is a big day!”
You need to sell this. Not all kids are going to be excited about it, but kids take their cues from us. Our excitement will be infectious.
I may be scared out of my wits and completely drowning in nerves, but I will NEVER let them know. In their minds, my parent is 100% invested in this and so excited.
Whatever this “potty training” thing is, my parent thinks it is awesome.
The Ceremonial Throwing Away of the Diaper
This is it! Take it to the trash with them. “Bye bye diaper! We pee in the potty now!”
And take them right to the toddler potty. There’s no turning back now (lol).
“This is where we pee! Sit! Show me!”
Have them sit on the potty and encourage them to try and get some out. This probably won’t happen – this is just your opening offer (wink).
Set the timer.
You will now live the next 72 hours by a clock. Buckle up! We are officially potty training.
Remember, you are staying at home with this child and I know that’s a big commitment, but for the chance to be diaper-free… well, there’s a lot I’m willing to do.
The Bullet Points of Day 1
- On Day 1, set the timer for 15 minutes. Every 15 minutes, take them to go pee.
- If they go, restart the timer for 15 minutes. If not, set it for 5 minutes and take them every 5 minutes until they pee.
- Your child needs to be naked from the waist down (we don’t want to be fooling around with pants yet and underwear feels like a plush diaper, so naked. Naked from the waist down. I potty trained in December once… we cranked up the heat).
- Keep your child hydrated. This might mean breaking your juice-free policy or busting out some lemonade. This isn’t a change in your lifestyle forever, but for today – you need a child with a full bladder.
- Every time the timer dings, take them to the toilet. “Potty timer!!! Let’s sit and pee!”
- Try to keep them sitting for at least 10 seconds. They might not sit long in the beginning, but they will eventually. Consider counting or singing a song together while they sit.
Once they get that first potty in the toilet
You are going to celebrate like you just won the Super Bowl. Win an Oscar for this celebration performance.
THIS IS HUGE.
I’m a big believer in giving a small candy prize to incentivize potty-ing, but you do what’s right for you.
Giving an M&M or two is HUGE these first few days, but somehow, it magically fades away on its own. Don’t worry that you might need to pack candy prizes for his Kindergarten teacher to give out.
If they don’t make it to the toilet…
It is what it is.
But if you catch them starting to pee, carry them to the toilet so they can start to understand that the sensation to pee and being in the bathroom goes together.
For the mess: You don’t need to shame or get upset. It’s part of life. Talk about it:
“OH NO!!! We need to go pee in the potty. Come on! Let’s go see if we can get some into the potty.”
Remember this is new. Think of how it would feel to have someone yelling at you for getting something wrong the first day or first time you ever tried it. That would be so hard.
Don’t yell and shame. Be understanding.
This potty training dance continues all day.
Stay close by them all morning.
Don’t let them stray far from you.
Make forts. Do sensory bins. Find some easy activities to pass the time.
And keep setting the timer, keep them hydrated, keep trying.
Be Dory – just keep swimming, just keep swimming, just keep swimming.
Things were always up and down for me the morning of day 1. We’d have some hits, we’d have some misses.
RELATED: Download my free list of easy indoor activities to help you keep things flowing on Day One.
But what do you do about nap time?
Potty training while awake and being dry while you sleep are two completely different skills.
This doesn’t get talked about a lot – we think potty training and we think goodbye to allllll the diapers.
Not exactly.
It can take years for kids to stay dry while they nap (there’s actually some genetic components to it that I go over in my Potty Training FAQ).
In our family, we do Pull-Ups at naps and nighttime.
I DO NOT call these diapers.
We call them “nap time potty pants” or “night time potty pants”, and they are clearly very different from diapers (wink).
[Again: being dry for naps and nights takes time. My oldest was dry for naps about a month into potty training, and dry at nights about a year later. My daughter was dry for naps a year after potty training, and dry at nights almost 1.5 years later. My youngest was dry for naps and night time about a year after potty training. Every kid is different.]
After nap time, we pick things back up where we left off – and the timer is back on for every 15 minutes.
Remember when I said we don’t leave the house?
I mean it. Right down to staying inside.
Being outdoors even just in our backyard was too much space for me to cover, supervise, and keep on potty schedule so – inside we stayed.
Twice I potty trained with a newborn. Once I got to potty train with two big kids as support. We were all in this together. This goes with our family values of being a community. In a community, we support and help someone trying to learn a new skill.
Now we say goodnight to Day 1…
Day 2 of Potty Training
With both my oldest kids, the morning of Day 2 was hardest. It was a little like Groundhog’s Day and just a repeat of what we’d done the day before… some hits, some misses.
It was a little more fatiguing on me because I was doing a lot of parenting during this – there’s no time to sit and breathe.
But we kept trucking. I kept the faith. I wanted to see the first 72 hours all the way through with total commitment.
We stayed inside again.
Hunkered down again.
Keep them naked, keep them hydrated.
Set the potty timer again – but for day 2, I set a 20-minute timer.
I also definitely called my best friend for an emergency Happy Meal delivery when we needed a pick me up. It’s okay to do that.
Then we had a breakthrough.
After nap time on Day 2, we hit an upswing.
The afternoon of Day 2 was when both my oldest kids took themselves to the bathroom without needing the timer or a reminder from me.
That’s the moment you’re waiting for. You might cry. You will do a dance. It is everything and you will breathe again. This is working!
Day 3 of Potty Training
On Day 3, things got smoother.
More hits than misses – lots more hits, and we started venturing into the backyard and gradually setting the timer longer and longer (30 minutes… then 45 minutes… then an hour….).
I didn’t keep them overly hydrated anymore – I started pulling back and moving us back into normal life.
If you want to let them play outside a bit REMEMBER: they need to pee before they head outside. Send them out as empty as possible.
Set their little toilet outside with them.
When do they finally wear pants?!
You’ll figure out when pants are right for your kiddo – underwear too.
Just remember that underwear and pants can feel A LOT like a diaper so don’t rush it.
If you’re home, naked makes life really easy especially if they aren’t great at pushing down their own pants. That’s a great verbiage tip: teach kids to PUSH DOWN their pants.
For my oldest, I did loose pants with no underwear for about a week. He hated underwear – it was a tough sell. He’d been cloth diapered so underwear really felt diapery to him.
For my daughter, she was right into pants by the end of day 3. She was ready.
For my youngest, (the one who self-trained) it took 10 days to get him into pants and underwear, and almost a month to understand not to pee instantly into them…
Every kid is different.
After the first 72 hours
Now that the first 72 hours is over…it’s time to (kind of) re-join the world.
Leaving the house is going to look different now. Your child is still potty training and things are fragile right now. Keep helping them learn, keep helping them find success.
Think about where bathrooms are.
Think about how long your errands are.
Make sure they pee before you leave the house. And keep a bag of extra clothes in the car.
Don’t push things for at least the first week. Try to keep things easy and light – a quick trip to Target is probably going to be a better bet than a 2-hour car ride to an amusement park.
Keep a little potty in your car – this one (affiliate link) is the BEST.
Remember, life will be normal again, but take a minute to break the routine for your child.
Even with my third born, the big kids and I locked things down for about two weeks and gave him his time. We didn’t go on big adventures away from home. We mostly stayed put, stayed close to the house with our errands, and made a lot of trips to the bathroom as a family (lol).
My youngest son’s life just took a big change and we wanted to honor that. It’s a big deal, and as a family, we celebrate big deals.
The truth about poop
Here’s the ugly truth about potty training.
Potty training and poop training are two very different skills.
And sometimes it can take a year for a child to fully learn how to handle pooping.
So, here’s what you can do:
Be supportive. Accept that you are going to clean up poop from places you don’t want to clean up poop from and make peace with that now.
Some kids get it fast – my daughter had no problem with pooping. She potty trained and poop trained at the same time.
My oldest took about 7 weeks to get poops into the toilet.
My youngest took 3 months to get it all worked out.
What do you do? Don’t shame, don’t yell. Be supportive and help them learn that pooping on a toilet isn’t scary.
While I waited for my kids to “poop train,” sometimes they’d poop in their underwear and sometimes at nap time in a Pull-Up. I was just happy they were pooping. We’d get it in the toilet eventually. The worst thing is for them to hold in their poops, because that is a cycle that’s hard to come out of.
RELATED: When do kids learn to wipe? Find out in my post dedicated to wiping.
Deep breath. You can do this.
I know that potty training is a lot. It feels like the Mount Everest of Parenthood. But it isn’t insurmountable. Plenty of people have summited this mountain before you.
We’ve all felt the nerves, the confusion, the terror, the frustration, the excitement, the relief, the pride, and the total joys of potty training.
You will make it through this, and you will be diaper free. It’s right on the horizon for you…. You’ve got this.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do you do if your toddler isn’t getting it at all?
Back off. Stop. Look at everything that’s going on. Find the root of the issue: is it a power struggle? Is it the method your using? Are they truly ready or old enough?
My youngest son showed EVERY sign of being ready to potty train around 21 months old. So we tried it for a morning. It was a total bust. He wasn’t grasping the concept, his communication skills weren’t there to make things work, and things were going south.
I put the brakes on it ASAP. And 2 months later, he walked up to me, took his own diaper off, handed it to me and said, “All done diapers.” And that was the last diaper he ever wore. He potty trained that day.
It’s ok to stop. It’s ok to adjust course. I mean this with all the love and in no way trying to panic you, but this is a high stakes venture that if done poorly, can have lasting consequences and health issues.
We have to get this right for our child and if that means walking away from it for a few months, that’s what it means.
What do you do if there isn’t a bathroom near?
For boys, find a tree. For those who need to sit or the business requires sitting, get a portable toddler potty for your car. Take it to the beach. Attach it to the hiking backpack. This potty will be your best friend.
What about the car seat?
Do not add anything to your child’s car seat like a puppy pad or try to make the seat waterproof. This can compromise the child’s safety. Get in the habit of having them pee before you drive somewhere. Wear a pull-up if it’s going to be a really long drive. Use “rubber pants” over their underwear. But again, do not add or alter the car seat during potty training.
More FAQs, please see my post
Susie Allison, M. Ed
Owner, Creator
Susie Allison is the creator of Busy Toddler and has more than 2.3 million followers on Instagram. A former teacher and early childhood education advocate, Susie’s parenting book “Busy Toddler’s Guide to Actual Parenting” is available on Amazon.