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can you have kids in stardew valley

Yes, you can have kids in Stardew Valley, but only after marriage and some specific house and relationship upgrades.

Quick Scoop: Can You Have Kids in Stardew Valley?

In Stardew Valley, your character can have up to two children once certain conditions are met. The game treats both biological kids and adopted kids the same in terms of gameplay and daily life on the farm.

How it works (basic answer)

  • You must be married.
  • Your farmhouse has to be upgraded twice so it has a nursery and a crib.
  • You need a high heart level with your spouse (10 hearts).
  • After that, there is a small daily chance your spouse will ask if you want a child when you go to bed.
  • If you say yes, a baby arrives after 14 in‑game days.

You can only ever have two children, and the game will give you one boy and one girl in total.

Requirements to Have Kids

Once you’re settled into Pelican Town life, the game quietly checks a few boxes before it even offers you the baby question.

Core requirements

  1. Marriage status
    • You must be married to either an NPC or another player in co‑op.
 * Both opposite‑gender and same‑gender marriages can have children; opposite‑gender couples have biological kids and same‑gender couples adopt.
  1. House upgrades
    • Your farmhouse has to be upgraded twice, which adds an extra room and a nursery with a crib.
 * If you use the renovation that removes the crib, you won’t be able to have (or adopt) more kids unless the crib is restored.
  1. Relationship level and time
    • At least 10 hearts with your spouse.
 * You must have been married for at least 7 days in‑game.
  1. Chance and timing
    • Each eligible night, there’s about a 5% (1/20) chance your spouse will ask if you want to have or adopt a child.
 * If you answer “yes,” the baby arrives 14 in‑game days later and appears in the crib.

What Kids Are Like in Stardew Valley

Kids in Stardew Valley are more of a cozy, role‑play feature than a power boost.

Growth stages

Children go through several stages but never grow into full adults.

  • Newborn: Sleeps in the crib all day.
  • Standing baby: Stands in the crib; you can interact but they stay put.
  • Crawler: Leaves the crib and crawls around the farmhouse during the day.
  • Toddler: Final stage; runs around the house and sleeps in one of the nursery beds.

They stay toddlers forever and do not grow into teens or move out.

Second child rules

  • You can only get a second child after the first reaches the toddler stage and starts sleeping in a bed instead of the crib.
  • The first child’s gender is random; the second is always the opposite.
  • Two kids is the hard limit.

Daily life and small interactions

  • Kids can show up at festivals like the Stardew Valley Fair alongside your spouse, wandering around the event.
  • They don’t interact deeply with other NPCs, but they help make your farm feel more “lived in.”
  • You can even put hats on your kids, just like with your horse—select a hat and interact with them.

Having Kids in Multiplayer

If you marry another player in co‑op, you can still have children.

  • The host (main player) is randomly asked about having a child once the usual conditions are met and the shared house is eligible.
  • If the host says yes, the farmhand spouse is also asked; both players must agree.
  • If both accept, a child arrives after 14 in‑game days in the same way as in single‑player.

Extra Notes and Edge Cases

  • If you remove the crib via renovation, you block future kids until you restore it.
  • Some guides note that completing major events the night a baby is due can sometimes interfere with the birth cutscene, so players occasionally try to avoid stacking big events on that date.
  • There are in‑game ways to dismiss children later using a special shrine, which permanently removes them from your farm, though many players treat this as a dark or “what‑if” option rather than normal play.

TL;DR: Yes, you can have kids in Stardew Valley, up to two total, once you’re married, have a twice‑upgraded farmhouse with a nursery, and a high‑heart spouse; then there’s a small nightly chance your spouse will ask about having or adopting a child.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.