Solids for Babies

7 months guide

Can babies eat Squash at 7 months?

Suitable with prep

Fully cooked squash is a useful first-food texture once baby is ready for solids.

A good candidate when baby is ready and the texture is adjusted.

Answer for 7 months

Fully cooked squash is a useful first-food texture once baby is ready for solids.

Texture, shape, and safety

Texture

Smooth puree, mashed squash, or large very soft wedges.

Shape

Serve cooked until it squishes easily, either mashed or as a large soft piece for grip.

Choking watch

Low risk when cooked very soft; avoid firm cubes, dry skins, and stringy pieces.

Allergen note

Squash is not a common major allergen.

Serving guardrails for 7 months

  1. Start with readiness: baby should be showing readiness signs and be supervised upright.
  2. Set the texture: Smooth puree, mashed squash, or large very soft wedges.
  3. Change the shape: Serve cooked until it squishes easily, either mashed or as a large soft piece for grip.
  4. Watch the risk: Low risk when cooked very soft; avoid firm cubes, dry skins, and stringy pieces.
  5. Have a fallback: Sweet potato or soft carrot can use the same cooked-soft approach.

How guidance changes by age

  • Before 6 months: Before 6 months, use pediatric guidance. Readiness signs matter more than the calendar.
  • Around 6 months: Fully cooked squash is a useful first-food texture once baby is ready for solids.
  • 7 to 8 months: Fully cooked squash is a useful first-food texture once baby is ready for solids.
  • 9 to 11 months: Fully cooked squash is a useful first-food texture once baby is ready for solids.
  • 12 months plus: Fully cooked squash is a useful first-food texture once baby is ready for solids.

What to do next

Roast or steam until very soft, remove tough skin, and cool before serving.

Safer alternative: Sweet potato or soft carrot can use the same cooked-soft approach.

When to ask a pediatric clinician

Squash is not a common major allergen.

Ask for individual guidance if baby has severe eczema, a known food allergy, prior reactions, swallowing concerns, poor growth, prematurity, or another medical condition that affects feeding.

Sources reviewed