Support That’s Centered around You and Your Family
Overnight support is not just about making it through the night. It is about protecting rest, supporting nervous system regulation, and laying healthy sleep foundations that support families well beyond the newborn stage.
We offer overnight postpartum doula support in intentional care containers, designed to provide consistent, developmentally informed care for both baby and parents. Rather than one-off nights, this work unfolds over time—allowing rhythms to emerge, patterns to be observed, and guidance to integrate in a way that feels supportive rather than prescriptive.
This offering is especially supportive for families who want expert guidance in the early days, so healthy sleep foundations can develop gently and responsively—reducing the likelihood of needing harsh or corrective sleep training later on. By supporting regulation and rhythm from the beginning, we help families move toward sustainable sleep health over time.
Overnight care centers on attentive infant care and parental rest, while also offering deeper guidance than standard overnight doula services.
Throughout the night, we observe cues, rhythms, and transitions, supporting regulation rather than enforcing schedules. Parents are supported in resting while also gaining insight into what their baby is communicating and how sleep is naturally unfolding.
Overnight shifts are eight hours and include attentive infant care, feeding and soothing support, lactation guidance as needed, and developmentally appropriate sleep shaping. Care also includes gentle postpartum recovery support for the postpartum parent, such as support with pumping or breastfeeding, bottle washing, light baby-related laundry, and practical guidance to support rest and recovery overnight.
Our approach integrates advanced knowledge of infant sleep development, postpartum physiology, and nervous system regulation—allowing care to support both immediate relief and long-term sleep wellbeing.
This offering supports families in building healthy sleep foundations, not enforcing sleep outcomes.
While extended overnight care can support longer sleep stretches over time, sleeping through the night cannot be guaranteed. Infant sleep is highly individual and influenced by feeding needs, neurological development, temperament, and family dynamics. Our role is to guide, support, and educate—not to train, pressure, or control.
Healthy sleep develops through a nervous system that feels safe and regulated, and through rhythms that align with a baby’s natural circadian development.
Rather than relying on rigid schedules or external methods, this work centers on understanding sleep cues, supporting day–night differentiation, and responding in ways that build trust and regulation early on.
As safety and rhythm become established, longer and more consolidated sleep often emerges naturally—often reducing the need for more intensive sleep interventions later.
The goal is not compliance, but resilience: sleep patterns that are sustainable, developmentally appropriate, and protective of both baby and parents.
Overnight support is offered in structured care containers, with 8-10 hour overnight shifts. When overnight care is offered on its own, support is available for up to four to five nights per week, depending on doula availability and family needs.
Containers typically span between 2 and 16 weeks, depending on family needs, season of postpartum, and desired level of support.
Investment for overnight care begins at $65 per hour, packaged by container length and number of nights per week. Rates may vary based on the experience level and specialized training of the attending doula. Most families invest between $4,000 and $32,000, depending on the scope and duration of care.
2-Week Overnight Reset
Short-term support designed to stabilize the early postpartum period or offer relief during a challenging phase.
6-Week Overnight Foundation
Support through the transition from early newborn care into more predictable rhythms, with ongoing guidance and integration.
10-Week Overnight Integration
Consistent overnight support as sleep patterns evolve, allowing for deeper observation, education, and parental confidence.
16-Week Overnight Sleep Integration
Long-term support across the fourth trimester and beyond, with gentle guidance toward longer sleep stretches as development allows.
Complimentary In-Home Visit for Extended Care
For families who book overnight care containers of six weeks or longer, we include a complimentary in-person home visit.
This visit allows us to connect face-to-face, assess the home environment, review sleep rhythms and feeding dynamics, and support alignment between overnight care and daytime routines. It is designed to strengthen continuity of care, deepen understanding of your baby’s cues, and ensure overnight support is integrated in a way that feels grounded and sustainable for the whole family.
Rest During Overnight Shifts
Overnight care is structured to support sustainability and nervous system health for everyone involved. When baby is sleeping, our doulas also rest. We require a clean, flat sleep surface for the attending doula to rest on during the shift. A comfortable couch with baby’s bassinet nearby, a mattress in the nursery, or a similar arrangement is completely appropriate.
This practice allows our doulas to remain attentive, regulated, and fully present throughout the night, while modeling healthy rest practices for the postpartum period.
Why Overnight Care Is Not Offered Every Night
We intentionally do not offer overnight care seven nights per week.
While consistent support is valuable, part of building long-term sleep health is supporting parents in learning how to regulate through nights with their baby as well. When parents are able to practice responding, settling, and attuning—within a supportive container—they build confidence, resilience, and trust in their own capacity.
Limiting overnight care to four or five nights per week creates space for integration, learning, and nervous system adaptation rather than dependence. This balance supports both the baby’s developing sleep rhythms and the parents’ long-term confidence and wellbeing.
Your baby relies on your specific nervous system attunement and sleep is a huge part of their development.
Optional Postpartum Nourishment
Some families choose to add weekly postpartum nourishment to their overnight care to further support recovery and reduce daytime load.
Nourishment is prepared in advance and delivered weekly, and may include warming broths, nourishing soups, and herbal tea support.
Nourishment add-ons are optional and can be added or adjusted during the application process.
Combining Daytime & Overnight Care
Overnight support may be combined with daytime postpartum care. When care is combined, overnight support is typically limited to two nights per week to ensure sustainable, high-quality care and to support parental regulation and confidence during nights at home.
For families who choose to work with a team of doulas, additional overnight support may be available. Team-based care allows for expanded coverage while maintaining continuity, nervous-system-aware support, and appropriate rest for both families and care providers.
The balance of daytime and overnight support is customized through the application process.
Booking & Availability
Overnight care is capacity-limited and offered in containers rather than one-off nights. Most families choose to book overnight support early, often during pregnancy, to ensure availability and continuity of care once baby arrives.
Because we book in advance it is advised to book as much time as you feel you want or need. Although we attempt to be flexible and can sometimes accommodate additional nights, extensions or shifting schedule needs, it is not guaranteed.
These are things we will talk about in our initial meeting, so you get the information you need to form a care plan that works best for you and your family.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should we book overnight support?
Most families reserve overnight care during pregnancy to ensure availability in the early postpartum weeks. Final schedules and details are adjusted after birth as needs become clearer.
Do you guarantee that our baby will sleep through the night?
No. This work focuses on nervous system regulation and circadian rhythm development to support healthy sleep foundations. Infant sleep is highly individual and cannot be guaranteed.
How many nights per week do families usually book?
When overnight care is offered on its own, families typically book between one and four nights per week, with some families opting for up to five nights depending on availability. When combined with daytime care, overnight support is limited to two nights per week unless working with a team of doulas.
What does an overnight shift include?
Overnight shifts are eight hours and include infant care, feeding and soothing support, lactation guidance as needed, developmentally appropriate sleep shaping, and light postpartum recovery support such as assistance with pumping or breastfeeding, bottle washing, and baby-related tasks that support parental rest.
Can we add nourishment to overnight care?
Yes. Weekly nourishment support can be added and customized during the application process.
Is overnight care available on its own?
Yes. Overnight care may be booked on its own or combined with daytime postpartum support.
