Dinner refusal at the end of a long day tests every parent. Often it's tiredness, grazing too late, or a bid for control more than real fussiness.
Making a second meal teaches refusal works. Offer the meal with one safe component and leave it at that.
A toddler full of crackers at 4pm won't want dinner at 5:30. Tighten the snack window.
Pressure and long negotiations kill appetite. Serve, chat, and end the meal without drama after 20 to 30 minutes.
Toddler appetites swing wildly day to day. A small dinner now and then is normal; their job is how much, yours is what and when.
Free: 5 word-for-word scripts for toddler meltdowns Grab five of our most-used calm-down scripts, free to your inbox — the fastest way to feel ready for the next hard moment. Send me the free scripts →Common causes are being overtired by dinnertime, too many afternoon snacks, or using refusal to assert control. Adjusting timing and staying calm usually helps.
It's best not to. Offer the family meal with at least one food they like; cooking alternatives on demand teaches them that refusing gets a better deal.