A bedtime prayer is one of the simplest, sweetest ways to close a child’s day. It calms the room, gives the night a shape, and tucks a little gratitude and reassurance in beside them. Below are more than 30 bedtime prayers for kids, sorted by age so you can find one that actually fits your child tonight, from a one-line prayer a toddler can repeat to fuller prayers for older children.
You will also find the classic traditional prayers, short Bible verses to pray over your child, Catholic prayers, and a simple bedtime prayer routine near the end. Save the ones that fit your family and make them yours.
If You Only Use One
Thank you, God, for this whole day,
for time to rest and time to play.
Watch over me the whole night through,
and wake me up to start anew. Amen.
Table of Contents
Short Bedtime Prayers for Toddlers
Toddlers do best with one or two lines they can repeat after you. Keep it tiny, say it the same way every night, and let them chime in on the words they know.
Keep me safe while I sleep.
Amen.Ages 1 to 3
God is with me, even here.
Goodnight, God. Amen.Ages 1 to 3
thank you for my bed.
Watch me while I sleep tonight.
Amen.Ages 1 to 3
keep me safe till morning light.
Amen.Ages 1 to 3
Bedtime Prayers for Preschoolers
Around ages three to five, children can handle a few more lines and love naming the people and things they are thankful for. These prayers leave room for that.
for time to rest and time to play.
Watch over me the whole night through,
and wake me up to start anew. Amen.Ages 3 to 5
Bless the people that I love.
Keep me cozy, keep me safe,
and send your angels from above. Amen.Ages 3 to 5
thank you for the day so bright.
Bless my family near and far,
and keep me safe wherever you are. Amen.Ages 3 to 5
for everyone who came my way.
Forgive me when I got it wrong,
and help me sleep the whole night long. Amen.Ages 3 to 5
Bedtime Prayers for Older Kids
School-age children can pray about their actual day, the things they worried about, and the people they care for. These prayers give them language for gratitude, forgiveness, and trust.
You’ve prayed together. Now you’d love them to actually stay asleep.
A calm bedtime prayer is a wonderful habit. When the night wakings keep coming, Betteroo builds a gentle, personalized sleep plan around your child and family, for less than a single consultant call. Take the free 3-minute quiz to find your starting point.
Classic Traditional Bedtime Prayers
These are the prayers passed down through generations. Your child may learn the same words you did as a child, which is part of what makes them so comforting.
I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
May angels watch me through the night,
and wake me with the morning light. Amen.Traditional (gentle version)
to whom God’s love commits me here,
ever this night be at my side,
to light and guard, to rule and guide. Amen.Traditional, Guardian Angel Prayer
bless the bed that I lie on.
Four corners to my bed,
four angels round my head. Amen.Traditional, “Black Paternoster”
Want every version of the most famous one? See our full guide to “Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep,” including the original, gentle, and Catholic wordings.
Bible Verses to Pray Over Your Child at Bedtime
Sometimes the simplest bedtime prayer is a verse spoken softly over your child as they drift off. These are short, comforting, and easy to remember.
For a fuller collection, see our guide to Bible verses about sleep, rest, and peace. For the littlest ones, see gentle prayers for a baby to sleep through the night.
Catholic Bedtime Prayers for Children
Many Catholic families close the day with the Guardian Angel Prayer and a short act of trust, often with a sign of the cross.
to whom God’s love commits me here,
ever this night be at my side,
to light and guard, to rule and guide. Amen.Guardian Angel Prayer
I give you my heart and my soul.
Watch over me and my family tonight,
and keep us safe until morning. Amen.Catholic family prayer
A Simple Bedtime Prayer Routine
Prayer settles a child most when it is the calm, predictable last step of the night. A routine many families use: wash up and pajamas, one or two books with the lights already low, then a short prayer, a hug, and goodnight. Keep the order and the wording the same each night so the prayer becomes a cue that the day is over and sleep is coming. Let your child add their own thank-yous or name the people they love. The goal is not perfect words, it is a peaceful, repeatable close to the day.
When Bedtime Is the Hard Part
If bedtime is a battle and the nights are broken no matter how lovely the prayer, you are far from alone. According to Betteroo’s State of Parent & Baby Sleep 2026, the largest dataset of its kind with 68,366 parents across 108 countries, most families are running on broken sleep right now.
Say the prayer. Then give them the gift of a full night.
Betteroo builds a personalized, gentle sleep plan around your child and family, for $15 to $25 a month. Answer a few questions and see where to start.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good bedtime prayer for a toddler?
Keep it to one or two lines a toddler can repeat, such as: “Thank you, God, for today. Keep me safe while I sleep. Amen.” Saying the same short prayer in the same calm voice every night helps it become a comforting bedtime cue.
At what age can a child start saying bedtime prayers?
You can pray over a baby from birth, and many toddlers begin repeating simple one-line prayers around ages two to three. There is no fixed starting age. Match the length to your child, starting with a single line and adding more as they grow.
What is the most popular children’s bedtime prayer?
“Now I lay me down to sleep” is the best-known children’s bedtime prayer in the English-speaking world, followed by the Guardian Angel Prayer in Catholic families. Both are short, traditional, and easy to memorize.
How do I make bedtime prayers part of our routine?
Make the prayer the last calm step before sleep: wash up, pajamas, a book or two with low lights, then the prayer, a hug, and goodnight. Keeping the order and wording consistent each night turns the prayer into a signal that the day is over and it is time to rest.
What if my child won’t sleep even after we pray?
That is extremely common and usually has nothing to do with the prayer. Most night wakings come from a child’s sleep habits and schedule, which respond well to a consistent, gentle plan. In Betteroo’s 2026 data, 55% of babies wake three or more times a night, so persistent wakings are the norm, not a sign you are doing anything wrong.







