🥣 6 Months

30-Day Meal Plan: 6 Months

First Purées & Iron-Rich Starters

At 6 months, your baby is ready to explore their first solid foods! The AAP recommends starting with smooth, single-ingredient purées to help identify any potential allergies. Breast milk or formula remains the primary nutrition source — solids are about exploration and skill-building at this stage.

✅ Readiness Signs at 6 Months

  • Can sit up with minimal support
  • Has good head and neck control
  • Shows interest in food (reaches, watches you eat)
  • Has lost the tongue-thrust reflex
  • Opens mouth when food approaches

🚫 Still Avoid at 6 Months

  • Honey — Risk of infant botulism — never before 12 months
  • Cow's milk (as drink) — Not until 12 months; formula/breast milk only
  • Salt & sugar — Kidneys can't handle it; avoid all added seasonings
  • Whole nuts/seeds — Choking hazard
  • Raw or chunky foods — Choking hazard — all food must be smooth purée
  • Egg whites — Introduce cautiously — wait until 6+ months, watch for allergy
  • Citrus fruits — Highly acidic — can cause rashes and GI upset
  • Strawberries — Common allergen — wait until after 6 months of solids
  • Fish high in mercury — Swordfish, shark, tilefish — avoid entirely

🌟 Key Foods to Introduce at 6 Months

🌾Iron-fortified baby cereal (oatmeal, rice)
🍠Sweet potato purée
🥕Carrot purée
🟢Green pea purée
🍌Banana (mashed smooth)
🥑Avocado (mashed smooth)
🎃Butternut squash purée
🍎Apple purée (cooked)
🍐Pear purée (cooked)
🍑Peach purée (cooked)
📅 Schedule: Start with 1–2 teaspoons once a day. Gradually increase to 2–3 tablespoons per feeding, 2–3 times daily by end of month.

📅 30-Day Meal Calendar

Week 1 — Getting Started

1–2 tsp per feeding, once/day. Introduce one food at a time. Wait 3–5 days before introducing a new food.
Day Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Day 1 Sweet potato purée (1 tsp)
Day 2 Sweet potato purée (1 tsp)
Day 3 Sweet potato purée (2 tsp)
Day 4 Sweet potato purée (2 tsp)
Day 5 Oatmeal baby cereal (1 tsp)
Day 6 Oatmeal baby cereal (1 tsp)
Day 7 Oatmeal baby cereal (2 tsp)

Week 2 — Building Variety

Increase to 2–3 tsp, 1–2 times/day. Introduce carrot and banana.
Day Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Day 8 Carrot purée (2 tsp)
Day 9 Carrot purée (2 tsp)
Day 10 Carrot purée (3 tsp)
Day 11 Oatmeal + carrot (1 tbsp)
Day 12 Banana mashed (2 tsp)
Day 13 Banana mashed (2 tsp)
Day 14 Sweet potato + oatmeal (1 tbsp)

Week 3 — Green Vegetables

Try 2–3 tbsp per feeding, twice daily. Introduce peas and avocado.
Day Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Day 15 Green pea purée (2 tsp)
Day 16 Green pea purée (1 tbsp) Banana (1 tbsp)
Day 17 Oatmeal (2 tbsp) Carrot purée (1 tbsp)
Day 18 Avocado mashed (2 tsp)
Day 19 Avocado (1 tbsp) Sweet potato (1 tbsp)
Day 20 Pea purée (1 tbsp) Oatmeal (2 tbsp)
Day 21 Mixed veggie day: carrot + pea Banana (1 tbsp)

Week 4 — Expanding Horizons

3–4 tbsp per feeding, 2–3 times daily. Introduce butternut squash and apple/pear.
Day Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Day 22 Butternut squash (2 tsp) Oatmeal (2 tbsp)
Day 23 Butternut squash (1 tbsp) Banana (1 tbsp)
Day 24 Apple purée (2 tsp) Carrot purée (1 tbsp)
Day 25 Apple purée (1 tbsp) Oatmeal (2 tbsp) Pea purée (1 tbsp)
Day 26 Pear purée (2 tsp) Avocado (1 tbsp)
Day 27 Pear + apple mix (1 tbsp) Sweet potato (2 tbsp) Oatmeal (2 tbsp)
Day 28 Butternut squash (2 tbsp) Banana + pear (2 tbsp) Oatmeal (2 tbsp)

Days 29–30 — Review Week

Rotate favorites. Breast milk or formula still 4–6x/day.
Day Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Day 29 Oatmeal + banana (2 tbsp) Sweet potato (2 tbsp) Carrot + pea (2 tbsp)
Day 30 Apple purée (2 tbsp) Avocado + pea (2 tbsp) Oatmeal + squash (2 tbsp)

🧪 Key Nutrients at 6 Months

Iron

Critical at 6 months — breast milk alone is no longer sufficient. Iron-fortified cereal and pureed meat are key sources.

Zinc

Supports immune function and growth. Found in fortified cereals and pureed meats.

Vitamin C

Helps absorb plant-based iron. Pair iron-rich foods with vitamin C-rich purées like sweet potato.

Fat

Essential for brain development. Avocado and breast milk are excellent fat sources.

Calories

Formula/breast milk still provides 90%+ of calories. Solids are about learning, not nutrition yet.

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⚠️ Medical Disclaimer: This meal plan is for educational purposes and is based on general AAP, WHO, and CDC guidelines. Every baby is different — developmental readiness, allergies, and health conditions vary. Always consult your pediatrician before introducing new foods, especially allergens. When introducing a new food, wait 3–5 days before introducing another to identify potential allergic reactions. Never give honey to babies under 12 months.