Baby Food Chart 6 to 12 Months: What to Feed and When

When my daughter turned six months, I opened three different apps, four websites, and one parenting book and walked away more confused than before. What should she eat first? How much? What about allergies? When do finger foods start? Every source said something slightly different, and none of them showed me a clear, month-by-month picture in one place.

Baby food chart showing age-appropriate purees, mashed foods, and finger foods for babies aged 6 to 12 months.

That is exactly what this baby food chart does. It covers every stage from six months through twelve, built on current AAP and CDC guidelines not trends or guesswork. Whether you are starting purees, doing baby-led weaning, or combining both, this guide gives you a clear answer for every month so mealtime feels like a plan, not a panic.

What the Baby Food Chart Covers: A Quick Overview

Before the month-by-month breakdown, here is what the baby food chart shows at a glance:

Baby food chart timeline showing feeding milestones from 6 to 12 months with age-based food stages, purees, mashed foods, and finger foods.

The window between six and twelve months is one of the most important feeding periods in a child’s life. By around six months, a baby’s iron stores from birth begin to decrease, which is why iron-rich foods are the first priority, not just fruit purees. Textures shift dramatically over these six months from thin, smooth purees at six months to small pieces of soft family food by twelve months. Every baby moves at their own speed through these stages, and some naturally progress faster or slower than the chart suggests. The chart is a guide, not a checklist.

Month by Month Baby Food Chart: 6 to 12 Months

Baby food chart showing texture progression from smooth purees to chunky mash and soft finger foods for babies aged 6 to 12 months.

6 Months Starting Solids:

Readiness signs to look for first:

  • Sits with minimal support and holds head steady
  • Shows interest when others eat
  • Opens mouth when food approaches
  • No longer pushes food out with tongue automatically

Not sure whether your baby is ready for solids? Read our guide on When Can My Baby Start Eating Real Food? 6 Signs to Know before starting the first foods.

7 Months: Expanding Flavors

8 Months: Thicker Textures Begin

Baby food chart featuring a curious baby reaching for mashed sweet potato, avocado, and steamed broccoli during self-feeding practice.

Looking for simple meal ideas? Try these Baby Food Combo Purees 15 Best Recipes for 6–12 Months to add variety to your baby’s menu.

9 Months:  First Finger Foods

Baby food chart tip at this stage:

All finger foods should squish easily between your own thumb and forefinger before going on the tray. If you cannot crush it easily, it is not soft enough yet.

Shapes matter at this stage.

Before the pincer grasp fully develops, offer foods in finger-length sticks so your baby can grab with their whole fist. Once the pincer grasp is working well, smaller pea-sized pieces become easier to pick up and less frustrating. Changing the shape of a food before changing the food itself is a common trick for getting past texture resistance at this stage.

How Much Milk Should a Baby Have Between 6 and 12 Months?

One of the most common questions parents bring to a pediatrician alongside the baby food chart question is: how much milk should my baby still be getting? The short answer, based on AAP guidance: breast milk or infant formula remains the primary source of nutrition through the entire first year. Solid food during this period is complementary it teaches texture, flavor, and eating skills, but it does not replace milk as the main calorie source until closer to twelve months.

Baby food chart guide featuring a prepared formula bottle and infant feeding essentials for babies aged 6 to 12 months.

A rough general pattern that many pediatricians describe:

At six to seven months, most babies still take around four to five milk feeds daily, with one or two small solid meals. At eight to nine months, this often shifts to three to four milk feeds with two solid meals. By ten to twelve months, many babies naturally settle into three solid meals and two to three milk feeds daily. These numbers vary by baby, and volume matters less than your baby’s growth, energy, and overall contentment. If you have specific questions about your baby’s milk intake, your pediatrician’s growth charts tell a more accurate story than any general number can.

10 to 11 Months: Table Food Transition

Baby food chart showing a baby eating soft family foods at the dinner table with parents during a healthy family mealtime.

As your baby moves toward family meals, these Baby Food Combinations That Make Babies Ask for More can introduce new flavors and textures.

12 Months: Almost at the Family Table

What changes at 12 months:

  • Cow’s milk as a drink: now appropriate
  • Formula: no longer the primary drink (transition to whole milk)
  • Textures: small chopped pieces, no longer needing special preparation for most soft foods
  • Juice: still not recommended by the AAP until at least twelve months

Foods to Avoid Completely Before 12 Months

This section of the baby food chart is not optional it is based on firm safety guidelines:

Baby food chart highlighting foods to avoid before 12 months, including honey, cow's milk, and whole grapes due to safety risks.
  • Honey:  in any form, including in baked goods or cooked foods risk of infant botulism, a serious illness that can be life-threatening in babies under twelve months
  • Cow’s milk as a drink:  the protein and mineral content is too high for a baby’s kidneys before twelve months; yogurt and cheese are fine in small amounts
  • Fruit juice not recommended before twelve months per AAP guidance
  • Added salt and sugar:  places strain on developing kidneys and builds a sweetness dependence that works against healthy eating later
  • Choking hazards: whole grapes, whole cherry tomatoes, raw hard vegetables, whole nuts, hot dogs, large chunks of meat, thick globs of nut butter, and large pieces of bread
FoodWhy to Avoid Before 12 Months
HoneyRisk of infant botulism — no exceptions
Cow’s milk as a drinkToo high in protein and minerals for a baby’s kidneys; lacks iron
Fruit juiceHigh in sugar, low in nutrition, not needed
Added saltStrains developing kidneys
Added sugarBuilds unhealthy expectations without nutritional value
Whole grapesChoking hazard always cut into quarters
Hot dogs, whole nutsChoking hazard
Rice cereal onlyRisk of arsenic exposure with exclusive rice cereal; offer a variety of fortified cereals such as oat, barley, and multigrain instead.

Real Mom Example: How Sarah Applied This Baby Food Chart

Sarah, a first-time mother from the parenting community at firsttimemomguide.com, started her daughter on solids at six months following this exact month-by-month approach. Her biggest fear at the start was allergens she had read conflicting things about when to introduce peanut butter. Following current AAP guidance (introduce early, alongside other foods, unless a doctor has advised otherwise), she offered thinned peanut butter at seven months with no reaction. By ten months, her daughter was eating soft pieces of whatever the family was having for dinner. “The chart took the guesswork out completely,” Sarah said. “I stopped wondering whether I was doing it right and just followed the next stage.”

Baby food chart journal tracking with a mother recording feeding progress while her baby enjoys healthy foods in a high chair.

Her one honest addition: every baby is different. Her daughter moved through the texture stages faster than the chart suggested. The chart gave Sarah a confident starting point adjusting the pace was the easy part once she knew where to begin.

What also surprised Sarah was how quickly the pressure she felt at the start faded once she understood the real goal of the first six months of solids. She had assumed solid food needed to replace milk feeds quickly. Once she understood that solids at this stage are about learning not calories the whole approach became calmer. Less food on the tray, less anxiety. More exploration, more success.

Baby Food Chart Comparison: What Works vs. What to Skip

This baby food chart comparison shows a clear pattern: the most effective approach combines iron-rich foods from the start, single-ingredient introductions for allergy tracking, and a gradual texture progression that follows your baby’s actual development rather than a fixed calendar.

Baby food chart comparison showing age-appropriate foods and foods to avoid before 12 months in an easy-to-follow feeding guide.
Food / ApproachAge AppropriateWhy It WorksAvoid Until
Iron-rich purees (beef, chicken, lentils)6 monthsIron stores decline at 6 months — priority nutrientNo restriction after 6 months
Single-ingredient purees6 monthsIdentifies allergic reactions clearlyCombine only after each tested
Smooth peanut butter (thinned)7 monthsEarly introduction lowers allergy risk per AAPAvoid if doctor advised delay
Soft finger foods9 months (pincer grasp)Builds self-feeding and motor skillsBefore 6 months
Family table food (soft, unsalted)10–11 monthsExpands palate, builds family mealtime habitsWith added salt/sugar at any age
Cow’s milk as a drink12 monthsBaby food chart endpoint — nutrient balance suits 12+ monthsBefore 12 months
Honey in any formNever before 12 monthsAlways avoid under 12 months
Fruit juiceAfter 12 months onlyBefore 12 months per AAP

5 Common Mistakes on the Baby Food Chart

Mistake 1.  Skipping iron-rich foods early

Iron stores from birth start depleting around 6 months. Offering fruit purees only, without iron-rich options like pureed meat, lentils, or fortified cereals, creates a nutritional gap right when the need is highest.

Mistake 2.  Staying on smooth purees too long

Most babies are ready for thicker textures by 7 to 8 months. Staying on smooth purees past 9 or 10 months makes the texture transition significantly harder a window that is worth not missing.

Mistake 3.  Delaying allergen introduction

Current guidance recommends introducing common allergens like peanut and egg from around 6 to 7 months, not avoiding them. Early introduction is associated with lower allergy risk in babies without a known allergy history.

Mistake 4.   Offering juice as a drink

 Fruit juice adds sugar without fiber and is not a nutritional requirement at any point in the first year. Water in a straw cup alongside meals is the appropriate drink alongside milk feeds.

Mistake 5. Treating the chart as a strict schedule

The timings above are developmental guides, not daily targets to hit. A baby who is not ready for finger foods at 8 months exact is not behind the ranges overlap, and individual readiness varies.

When to Call Your Pediatrician

Baby food chart guide with a pediatrician’s stethoscope and heart symbol, highlighting expert feeding advice for babies 6 to 12 months.

Most babies move through the baby food chart stages without issues. Call your pediatrician if:

  • Your baby shows signs of a food allergy: hives, swelling around the mouth or eyes, repeated vomiting, or any difficulty breathing after a new food
  • Your baby refuses all solids consistently beyond seven months with no sign of interest
  • Your baby gags or chokes at nearly every meal (occasional gagging is normal choking is not)
  • You notice little or no weight gain over several weeks
  • You have any questions about allergen introduction, especially if your baby has severe eczema

Final Thoughts

The baby food chart from six to twelve months is not a strict test to pass it is a framework that gives you a confident starting point and a clear direction. Iron-rich first foods, single-ingredient introductions, early allergen exposure, gradual texture progression, and family mealtime by twelve months: these six principles, grounded in current AAP guidance, cover everything a new parent needs to get started without second-guessing every meal.

Baby food chart featuring balanced baby meal ideas with soft vegetables, oats, and fruit for babies aged 6 to 12 months

The baby food chart also does something equally important: it tells you what to skip entirely before twelve months, so the list of things to avoid is just as clear as the list of things to offer.

Pin this guide for the next stage, bookmark it for the month you are in right now, and go back to your pediatrician whenever something specific to your baby needs a more personalized answer.

Disclaimer:

This baby food chart is for general informational purposes only and is grounded in current AAP and CDC guidance. It is not medical advice and does not replace your pediatrician’s recommendations. Every baby develops at their own pace. If your baby shows signs of a food allergy, has a history of severe eczema, or you have any concerns about their feeding progress, speak with your doctor before introducing new foods.

1. What should I feed my baby first at 6 months?

The AAP recommends starting with iron-rich foods since natural iron stores begin declining around six months. Good first choices are pureed beef, chicken, or iron-fortified oat cereal, alongside vegetables and fruits introduced one at a time with three to five days between each. There is no required order for fruits versus vegetables both are appropriate first foods.

2. When can babies start eating finger foods?

Most babies are ready for soft finger foods around nine months, when the pincer grasp develops. All finger foods at this stage should squish easily between two fingers. Before nine months, soft mashed lumps are more appropriate than pieces that require picking up.

3. Do I need to introduce foods in a specific order?

No. The AAP’s current guidance states there is no evidence that introducing foods in a particular order provides any benefit. What matters more is variety, texture progression, and introducing iron-rich foods early.

4. When should I introduce peanut butter to my baby?

Current AAP guidance encourages early introduction of peanut butter (thinned with water or pureed fruit to a smooth consistency) alongside other foods, generally around six to seven months, unless your baby has severe eczema or a known egg allergy. In those cases, speak with your pediatrician first, since an allergy test is often recommended before introduction.

5. How do I know if my baby is eating enough solid food?

Between six and twelve months, breast milk or formula remains the main source of nutrition. Solid food is complementary during this stage, not a replacement. A baby who is gaining weight steadily, producing adequate wet diapers, and showing energy and alertness is almost always eating enough even if individual meals seem small. If you are concerned about intake or growth, your baby’s growth chart at the next pediatrician visit is the most reliable indicator.

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