Put a mirror in front of a baby and watch what happens. There’s usually a beat of confusion, then curiosity, then absolute delight. Babies are drawn to mirrors in a way that feels almost magnetic, and it turns out there are some very good developmental reasons for it.
Mirror play is one of those brilliantly simple activities that looks like fun but is quietly doing a lot of important work.
They’re Drawn to Faces
Babies come into the world already primed to look at faces. It’s instinctive, and it makes sense, because faces are where so much of the important information is. A mirror gives your baby a face that is always available, always responsive, and always doing exactly what they do. That’s endlessly fascinating to a young baby, even if they don’t yet understand that the face in the mirror is their own.
For a baby who loves to look at faces, a mirror is basically the best toy in the room.
It Supports Self-Awareness
Babies don’t recognise themselves in a mirror straight away. That comes later, usually somewhere around 18 months to two years. But in the meantime, all that gazing is laying groundwork. Your baby is beginning to notice that this face moves when they move, responds when they respond, and exists in relation to them in a way other faces don’t. It’s one of the earliest steps toward understanding themselves as a separate person in the world.
The big self-recognition moment gets a lot of attention, but the journey there starts much earlier.
It Encourages Social Skills
Mirror play has a natural back-and-forth rhythm to it. Your baby pulls a face, the mirror responds, they try something else. It’s not so different from the kind of interaction they have with you, and it gives them a low-pressure space to practise making expressions, reading responses, and figuring out how engagement works. Those are social skills, and they’re being practised every time your baby has a good look at their reflection.
It might just look like a baby gurgling at a mirror, but there’s quite a lot going on.
It Boosts Visual Development
Mirrors offer two things that young babies find particularly compelling: high contrast and movement. A baby’s vision is still developing in the early months, and the combination of a bright, moving, responsive image is excellent for strengthening focus and visual tracking. Every time your baby follows their own reflection or watches your face appear beside theirs, they are giving their visual system a workout.
Simple, free, and genuinely useful.
It’s a Simple Way to Play
You don’t need a special setup for mirror play. A safe, shatterproof baby mirror propped during tummy time, fixed to a play mat, or held up during a quiet moment is all it takes. Your baby will engage with it in their own way and at their own pace. Get in there beside them and watch their face when they spot you in the reflection too. That’s usually worth seeing.
Some of the best baby activities really are the simplest ones.






