Your Child's First Sleepover
A UK guide to a calm, well-prepared first sleepover, covering host checks, devices overnight and emergencies.
A first sleepover is exciting, but it also moves your child away from your usual rules around devices, food and sleep.
A short, friendly conversation with the host adult is the single most useful step. Most worries are solved by knowing who else is in the house.
Readiness signs
Look for these before saying yes
- ✓Has visited the friend's home in daytime before.
- ✓Can ask an adult for help when something feels wrong.
- ✓Sleeps comfortably away from home (grandparents, family).
- ✓Knows their full address and a parent's mobile number.
- ✓Can say no to food, drinks or films they do not want.
Parent checklist
Step 1
Speak to the host adult by phone, not only by text.
Step 2
Ask who else will be in the house overnight.
Step 3
Agree how devices, films and games will be supervised.
Step 4
Share allergies, medicines and any medical needs in writing.
Step 5
Agree a pickup time and a no-questions-asked early collection plan.
Step 6
Pack a small comfort item and a written list of contact numbers.
Step 7
Make sure your child knows 999 and your mobile number.
Family agreement points
- •I can call home at any time, even very late.
- •I will tell the host adult if I feel unwell or upset.
- •I will not watch films or play games above my agreed age.
- •I will not let anyone take photos of me changing or in bed.
- •I know my body is mine and I can say no.
What to say
Phrases that help
- "If anything feels wrong, you can call me at any hour and I will come."
- "You do not have to give a reason to leave a sleepover."
- "Adults at sleepovers should never ask you to keep secrets from me."
- "If they show you something on a phone that worries you, tell me when I see you."
- "You are in charge of your body. No one should touch you in a way that feels wrong."
Settings to review
- •Child's phone or watch fully charged and ringer on.
- •Find My or Family Link location sharing active for the night.
- •Trusted contacts (parent, second parent, grandparent) saved.
- •Emergency SOS shortcut tested on phone or smartwatch.
- •Bedtime app limits set on your child's device.
- •Host adult's number saved in the child's phone.
Red flags
- Host adult vague about who else will be in the house.
- Older siblings or unknown adults staying overnight too.
- Child reluctant to discuss the visit afterwards.
- Reports of films, games or images above your child's age.
Review in 30 days
Come back to these questions
- →Ask open questions about what they enjoyed and what they didn't.
- →Check if any new "keep this secret" messages came up.
- →Talk about anything they saw on phones or screens.
- →Note any sleep, mood or appetite changes since the night.
- →Decide together if a return visit feels right.
Read next
Frequently Asked Questions
This is practical educational content to support families. For case-specific concerns about a child's safety, contact the NSPCC helpline on 0808 800 5000 or your local safeguarding team.