Babies usually start crying visible, “real” tears sometime between about 2 weeks and 3 months of age, with many parents noticing them around 1–2 months.

Quick Scoop

  • In the first days and weeks, newborns often cry without visible tears because their tear glands and ducts are still maturing.
  • Tear production ramps up from around 2 weeks, but it can take weeks before you actually see tears roll down their cheeks.
  • Most babies have obvious, steady tears when they cry by about 2–3 months, though some start as early as 2–4 weeks and others closer to 3 months.
  • As long as your baby’s eyes look moist and comfortable, crying without tears in the early months is usually normal.

A lot of parents describe the first “real tears” as a heartbreaking little milestone—suddenly their baby’s cry looks as sad as it sounds.

Mini Timeline: Tear Development

  • 0–2 weeks:
    • Baby cries loudly but cheeks stay dry.
    • Tear glands make just enough fluid to keep eyes lubricated, not enough to spill out.
  • 2–8 weeks:
    • Tear glands become more active.
    • You may start seeing small tears, wet eyelashes, or a bit of moisture at the corners of the eyes during stronger cries.
  • 1–3 months:
    • For most babies, this is when crying comes with clear, rolling tears you can easily see.
* Emotional and social crying becomes more obvious—tears may appear with frustration, discomfort, or sadness, not just basic needs.

Why Newborns Don’t Cry Tears Right Away

  • They are not born with fully active tear glands and open ducts ; these structures are still developing after birth.
  • Early fluids go mainly to keeping the eye surface healthy and moist, rather than making visible “overflow” tears.
  • This is a normal part of newborn development and not a sign that their feelings are “less real.”

A quick example

A full‑term baby might cry without tears for the first 3 weeks, show slightly wet lashes during intense crying at 5–6 weeks, and have obvious tear tracks down their cheeks by 2 months. Another baby might show visible tears from the first month—both can still be normal.

When to Check with a Doctor

You should talk to a pediatrician or other health professional if you notice:

  • One or both eyes are very watery all the time, with minimal crying, suggesting a blocked tear duct.
  • Redness, swelling, yellow or green discharge, or crusting around the eye, which can signal infection.
  • By around 3–4 months, your baby never seems to have moist eyes or visible tears at all, especially if their eyes look dry or irritated.

A Note on “Latest News” and Forum Talk

  • Parenting forums and social posts show a huge range: some parents say their baby had real tears from day one, others not until closer to 3 months.
  • Recent baby‑care articles in 2024–2025 still give the same core window—roughly 2 weeks to 3 months—so the basic timeline hasn’t changed in the latest guidance.

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