Solids for Babies

9 months guide

Can babies eat Tomato at 9 months?

Use caution

Tomato can fit after solids start, but small round tomatoes need careful cutting and the acidity can irritate skin.

Prep, allergy context, or texture matters before serving.

Answer for 9 months

Tomato can fit after solids start, but small round tomatoes need careful cutting and the acidity can irritate skin.

Texture, shape, and safety

Texture

Soft ripe tomato pieces, cooked tomato mash, or smooth tomato mixed into other foods.

Shape

Quarter small tomatoes lengthwise and flatten if needed. Remove tough skin or seeds for beginners.

Choking watch

Cherry and grape tomatoes are round choking shapes when whole; never serve them whole to babies.

Allergen note

Tomato is not a common major allergen, but acidic juices can cause temporary skin redness.

Serving guardrails for 9 months

  1. Start with readiness: baby should be showing readiness signs and be supervised upright.
  2. Set the texture: Soft ripe tomato pieces, cooked tomato mash, or smooth tomato mixed into other foods.
  3. Change the shape: Quarter small tomatoes lengthwise and flatten if needed. Remove tough skin or seeds for beginners.
  4. Watch the risk: Cherry and grape tomatoes are round choking shapes when whole; never serve them whole to babies.
  5. Have a fallback: Cooked squash, sweet potato, or soft pear may be gentler if acidity bothers baby's skin.

How guidance changes by age

  • Before 6 months: Before 6 months, use pediatric guidance. Readiness signs matter more than the calendar.
  • Around 6 months: Tomato can fit after solids start, but small round tomatoes need careful cutting and the acidity can irritate skin.
  • 7 to 8 months: Tomato can fit after solids start, but small round tomatoes need careful cutting and the acidity can irritate skin.
  • 9 to 11 months: Tomato can fit after solids start, but small round tomatoes need careful cutting and the acidity can irritate skin.
  • 12 months plus: Tomato can fit after solids start, but small round tomatoes need careful cutting and the acidity can irritate skin.

What to do next

Choose ripe soft tomato, cut small tomatoes lengthwise into quarters, and serve plain without added salt.

Safer alternative: Cooked squash, sweet potato, or soft pear may be gentler if acidity bothers baby's skin.

When to ask a pediatric clinician

Tomato is not a common major allergen, but acidic juices can cause temporary skin redness.

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