What to Wear Baby in Summer: Layering Guide & Safety Notes
Dressing a baby for summer (75-90°F) has its own rules. One more layer than an adult would wear comfortably. This guide covers the layering hierarchy, fabric guidance, the safety considerations specific to baby wear, and the items worth investing in.
THE FOUNDATION
Dressing a baby for summer (75-90°F) follows one core rule: one more layer than an adult would wear comfortably. Summer weather ranges 75-90°F in most climates; this guide assumes that range and adjusts at the margins for outliers.
THE LAYERING
short-sleeve cotton onesie, lightweight cotton pants or shorts, sun hat, breathable booties — UV-protection is critical.
FABRIC
Cotton, merino, and lightweight synthetics — avoid wool next to bare skin (can irritate).
SAFETY
Never zip a coat or use thick puffy coats under car seat straps — the layer compresses in a crash and the straps will not restrain the baby. Use a removable thin layer, then a blanket or car-seat poncho over the buckled child..
KEY ITEMS TO OWN
Cotton onesie base, footed pajamas or knit pants, fleece bunting for outdoor cold, hat year-round (high heat loss from the head).
WHAT TO BUY VS. WHAT TO IMPROVISE
For baby wear specifically, the items worth investing in are outerwear and footwear. Tops and base layers can be cycled through quickly (kids grow, pregnancy shapes change, plus-size and petite sizing benefits from a few pieces that fit perfectly rather than many that fit roughly). For summer, the outerwear and footwear take the most weather abuse — that's where quality saves you twice.
WHAT TO AVOID
Dressing for the calendar instead of the actual forecast. Summer weather varies by region by 20°F or more; the actual temperature on your phone beats the season label every time..