If dinner has become a daily standoff, take heart: the most effective approach is usually to turn the pressure down, not up.
Fussy eating is incredibly common in young children. It can be a normal phase — and it can also be a sign that a little support would help. Either way, these gentle strategies make mealtimes calmer and, over time, help children become more willing to try.
1. Drop the pressure
“Just one more bite” and bribery tend to backfire, turning food into a battleground. A helpful principle is the division of responsibility: you decide what is offered, when and where; your child decides whether and how much to eat. It feels counter-intuitive, but lowering pressure builds trust.
2. Eat together and model
Children learn to eat by watching the people they love. Sharing meals — and visibly enjoying a range of foods yourself — does more than any amount of encouragement.
3. Serve “safe” and new foods side by side
Always include at least one food you know your child will eat, alongside small amounts of something new. A full tummy of “safe” food makes a child braver, not fussier.
4. Explore food away from the pressure of eating
Let your child touch, smell, squish and play with new foods while cooking or shopping — no expectation to eat. Familiarity is the first step, and it can take many friendly exposures before a child is ready to taste.
5. Keep mealtimes calm and predictable
Regular times, a comfy seat, minimal screens and short, pleasant meals all help. If it's not eaten, stay neutral and try again another day — without comment.
We offer warm, responsive feeding support in your own home, where real mealtimes happen — never with force or tricks.