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Home safety checklist for crawling babies
30 items
Sliding plate covers > plug-in caps. Plug-in caps come out and become choking hazards. Do every accessible outlet in the house, not just the nursery. Crawlers find outlets you forgot existed.
Use outlet cover boxes or furniture to block access. Babies yank cords and pull whatever is attached onto themselves. Secure with cord covers or route behind furniture permanently.
Bundle and hide every cord — lamp, TV, charger, speaker. Use cord channels or adhesive clips along baseboards. A cord is a strangulation risk AND a way to pull a lamp onto their head.
Use metal L-brackets or furniture straps screwed into wall studs — not drywall alone. Bookshelves are the #1 furniture tip-over risk. One heavy book pulled from a low shelf can topple the whole unit.
Anti-tip kit with straps into wall studs. A dresser with open drawers creates a "staircase" babies climb. 1 child dies every 2 weeks from furniture tip-overs. This takes 10 minutes to install.
Wall-mount is safest. If standing, use anti-tip straps anchored to the wall stud behind it. A falling TV on a toddler is catastrophic — this is not optional in any room with a freestanding TV.
Stick-on corner guards on coffee tables, end tables, fireplace hearths — any hard edge at baby head height. They pull up on furniture and fall face-first. Clear silicone guards are least noticeable.
Hardware-mounted gates ONLY at the top of stairs — pressure-mounted can be pushed out. Must be at least 22 inches tall. Verify the gate meets ASTM F1004 safety standard. No accordion-style gates.
Pressure-mounted gates are fine at the bottom of stairs since a fall from the bottom is not dangerous. Still verify the fit is snug — kids lean hard on these. Check tightness weekly.
Block access to kitchens, bathrooms, home offices, garages — any room with hazards. Walk through your house on your knees to see what a baby sees. You'll find dangers you never noticed.
Magnetic locks are invisible from outside and the most secure. Adhesive locks work but fail over time. Lock EVERY cabinet with chemicals: under sink, laundry room, bathroom vanity. All of them.
Knives, scissors, skewers, bottle openers — lock the drawers or move everything above counter level. Drawer latches ($8 for a 10-pack) install in 2 minutes per drawer. Don't delay this one.
Toddlers can turn on burners and have. Knob covers pop over the existing knobs and require adult dexterity to operate. If you have a touch panel stove, use the child lock feature built in.
Helpful once they can stand and open things. Babies eat random fridge items and pull heavy bottles onto themselves. A simple strap lock ($5) works fine. Not urgent until 10-12 months.
A toddler can drown in 1 inch of water in under 60 seconds. Toilet locks prevent both drowning and the inevitable toy/phone burial at sea. Install in every bathroom they can access.
Every medication, vitamin, and supplement goes behind a locked cabinet or door — not just "up high." Toddlers climb. Child-resistant caps slow adults down but don't stop determined toddlers.
Set your water heater to 120F (48C) maximum. At 140F, a child gets third-degree burns in 3 seconds. At 120F, it takes 5 minutes. Check with a thermometer at the tap — don't trust the dial.
Install window stops or guards that prevent opening more than 4 inches. Screens are NOT fall protection — they pop out under a toddler's weight. Falls from even a second-floor window can be fatal.
Cord strangulation kills children every year. Replace corded blinds entirely (cordless options start at $20) or install cord cleats 6+ feet high and wrap cords tightly. This is urgent.
Get on your hands and knees and crawl through every room. Coins, buttons, batteries, pen caps, small toys, rubber bands — anything smaller than a toilet paper tube is a choking hazard. Do this monthly.
Hearth padding ($30-80) around the fireplace edges. Lock or cover the fireplace opening even when not in use — ash is toxic if eaten. If gas fireplace, the glass reaches 400F+ and stays hot after off.
Pool fence with self-closing, self-latching gate is required in most states. Must be 4+ feet tall with no climbable features. Drowning is the #1 cause of death for kids ages 1-4. Non-negotiable.
Paint, solvents, fertilizer, pesticides, antifreeze (sweet-tasting, deadly), gasoline — all on high shelves or in locked cabinets. If it has a warning label, it needs to be inaccessible. Period.
Lock the toolbox and secure the pegboard. Saws, drills, nails, screws — a garage is a toddler death trap. A simple padlock on a cabinet or a baby gate blocking garage access solves this.
Common toxic plants: oleander, foxglove, lily of the valley, azaleas, mushrooms. Fill holes that can trap a small foot. Check for ant mounds and wasp nests at kid-height. Walk the yard monthly.
Self-closing hinges + childproof latch on every yard gate. A toddler can reach a street in seconds. Test from inside at toddler height — if they can reach the latch, it's not childproof.
Babies grab and eat pet food — choking hazard and bacteria risk. Feed pets on a raised stand or in a gated area. Also keep pet water bowls monitored — standing water is a drowning hazard.
Cat litter contains toxoplasmosis and clumping agents that swell if eaten — both dangerous. Baby gate around the litter area or use a top-entry litter box that baby can't access.
Babies pull open drawers and use them as steps to climb the dresser — this is how tip-overs happen. Drawer locks on the bottom 2-3 drawers prevent the "staircase" climbing pattern.
Every room with blinds needs this, not just the nursery. Walk through bedrooms, living room, guest room — anywhere with corded window coverings. Cordless replacement blinds are the permanent fix.
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