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Gentle Parenting: What It Is and How to Practice It

What is gentle parenting? Learn how this approach builds empathy, sets boundaries, and helps raise confident, emotionally aware children.

Updated April 17, 2026

by Amanda Vierheller

Medically reviewed by Rachel Tomlinson

Registered Psychologist
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Gentle parenting is a nurturing approach to raising children that focuses on connection, communication, and guiding behavior with empathy and respect. Rather than relying on punishment, it encourages parents to partner with their children to support their growth and development.1,2

This parenting style emphasizes understanding a child’s behavior, setting clear and consistent boundaries, and helping children learn to make positive choices independently. When practiced consistently, gentle parenting can help build confidence, emotional awareness, and strong decision-making skills.1,2

Gentle parenting focuses on helping children understand their behavior, rather than simply correcting it. To better understand how this approach works in everyday life, it helps to look at how it differs from other parenting styles.

How Gentle Parenting Is Different From Other Parenting Styles

This approach focuses on collaboration, emotional awareness, and guiding children, rather than controlling behavior through punishment. While the permissive parenting style is child-led, with minimal boundaries, the authoritarian style is parent-led, with many boundaries, and gentle parenting uses teamwork between parents and children to set and respect boundaries.3

Parents lead their children to make positive decisions through open communication and by setting clear and consistent expectations. Natural consequences, rather than punishment, guide little ones while encouraging social-emotional learning. Gentle parenting respects the feelings and thoughts of children, empowering them to become confident and independent.1,2

Parents connect with their children to build empathy and support social-emotional development. Through gentle parenting, parents provide mutual understanding, modeling, and positive guidance to raise happy, confident children. This approach implements four key pillars: respect, boundaries, empathy, and understanding.3,4,5

Related: Types of Parenting Styles Explained by an Expert

Respect

Respecting a little one’s thoughts and feelings makes them feel heard and valued. Openly expressing themselves with their parents early encourages healthy communication skills that become the foundation for all future relationships while giving them the confidence to thrive independently at school, during activities, and on the playground.

Boundaries

Gentle parenting uses fair and firm boundaries to make children feel confident in the expectations set for them and includes the child as often as possible in creating these guidelines. For example, creating a list of rules for the home as a family is a hands-on way to involve little ones in decision-making and bonds the family through teamwork.

The gentle parenting approach believes it is normal and healthy for children to test boundaries. As little ones grow from babies to toddlers to young children, they test boundaries as they gain independence. This shows curiosity and growing confidence and should not be judged harshly or taken personally by parents (no matter how hard that may be!).

Understanding

Parents understanding how hard it is for children to be constantly growing, developing, and having added expectations put on them is an essential component of gentle parenting. Gentle parenting asks that parents have realistic expectations for their children and themselves. When parents make mistakes, a gentle parenting strategy is to use those experiences as an essential tool to model appropriate actions, such as the parent apologizing or making amends. This teaching impacts little ones and helps them realize that everyone makes mistakes, which encourages resilience.

Empathy

Developing empathy can be tough for young children, as they are often in phases of development where, to gain independence and confidence in themselves, they are primarily self-serving. Gentle parenting encourages children to think more about how others would approach things or are feeling, which leads them to build empathy and social connections. Along with communication, pretend play can help little ones engage in empathy and practice important social interactions. Pretend play encourages expressive language, which promotes asking questions, making choices, and experiencing the feelings of others. This can build essential connections and impressions on how children will treat people in real-world situations and support the development of their social conscience.

How to Practice Gentle Parenting

Gentle parenting can be practiced from infancy through childhood using consistent communication, respect, and clear expectations. From the start, communicating and respecting the child forms a bond of trust and security that will promote confidence as they grow. When speaking, parents look at children’s faces as they talk, give them undivided attention, actively listen and respect their thoughts and feelings. They work with their children to establish boundaries and use consistent reinforcement, encouragement, and open communication to help develop decision-making skills and confidence.

Simple Ways to Practice Gentle Parenting

These practical strategies can help you apply gentle parenting in everyday moments while still maintaining clear expectations and boundaries.

Use Meaningful Praise

Meaningful praise is focused on character, kindness, and any action parents want children to repeat. Parents may praise children for helping, using manners, showing kindness, and sharing feelings.

Use Positive Dialogue

Instead of saying, “No, don’t touch,” gentle parenting asks the parent to give the reason, allowing the child to understand the importance and learn to respect the item. With gentle parenting, the parent might say, “This item is fragile and could break, so we can only look at it and enjoy it with our eyes.”

Use “We” and “Our” Language

Using “we” and “our” phrases when talking about behavior, rules, and expectations helps little ones follow the rules more readily because they understand the rules are for everyone. For example, if your child hits you out of frustration or anger, a parent practicing gentle parenting may say, “Ouch, that hurt me. We cannot use our hands to hit because it hurts other people’s bodies. Please do not hit me, and I will not hit you.” If the behavior continues, the parents will remove themselves from the space to give the child time to reflect and use their hands respectfully.

Create a Communication Corner

Create a communication corner or a calming corner, rather than a space for punishment, to provide a safe place to discuss issues and feelings. Designate a cozy space to talk together or for children to take time alone. Offer drawing pads and crayons as talking tools and inspire little ones to find their words. Support little ones by providing hands-on tools to help them process and manage feelings. This can include books, fidgets, stress balls, and plush toys.

Gentle parenting is not about being permissive or removing structure. It is about creating a supportive environment where children feel heard, understood, and guided as they learn.

With consistency, patience, and clear boundaries, this approach can help children grow into confident, empathetic individuals who carry these skills into every stage of life.

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Amanda dedicates her time to working at Playgarden Prep's Upper East Side program while also leading the Playgarden Online team. She is an educator and specialist in all things early learning, and helped to co-found Playgarden in 2007 alongside Carlos and Valeska, and also co-founded Playgarden Online. Originally from California, Amanda enjoys spending time with her three wonderful children in their Upper East Side neighborhood.

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