How to serve
How to serve Juice for baby
Avoid juice before 12 months unless a pediatric clinician gives a specific reason.
Choose a safer alternative or wait until the age/risk changes.At a glance
Avoid juice before 12 months unless a pediatric clinician gives a specific medical reason.
Avoid juice before 12 months unless a pediatric clinician gives a specific reason.
Juice is a drink, not a first-food texture for infants under 12 months.
Texture is not the main concern; age, nutrition role, and sugar exposure matter.
Step-by-step serving method
- Start with readiness: Avoid juice before 12 months unless a pediatric clinician gives a specific medical reason.
- Set the texture: Juice is a drink, not a first-food texture for infants under 12 months.
- Change the shape: Offer breast milk or formula as the main drink before 12 months, and use whole soft fruit instead.
- Watch the risk: Texture is not the main concern; age, nutrition role, and sugar exposure matter.
- Have a fallback: Mashed banana, applesauce, pear puree, or soft berries provide fruit flavor with texture.
Texture, shape, and safety
Juice is a drink, not a first-food texture for infants under 12 months.
Offer breast milk or formula as the main drink before 12 months, and use whole soft fruit instead.
Texture is not the main concern; age, nutrition role, and sugar exposure matter.
Fruit juice is not a common major allergen category, but ingredients vary by product.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Serving before baby shows readiness signs or while baby is reclined.
- Leaving round, hard, slippery, sticky, or chewy shapes unchanged.
- Adding honey for babies under 12 months or relying on added salt and sugar.
- Trying a common allergen for the first time when baby is unwell, rushed, or not supervised.
What to do next
Use mashed or pureed whole fruit for flavor instead of juice during the first year.
Safer alternative: Mashed banana, applesauce, pear puree, or soft berries provide fruit flavor with texture.
When to ask a pediatric clinician
Fruit juice is not a common major allergen category, but ingredients vary by product.
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
- CDC: Foods and Drinks to Avoid or Limit Retrieved 2026-06-16
- HealthyChildren.org / AAP: Starting Solid Foods Retrieved 2026-06-16