It’s time to teach your child to wipe. But how? How do you actually do that? This step by step post has the answers you need (and the humor to get you through this).

- Let’s get down to brass tacks this post is about butts
- What age should a kid be able to wipe themselves?
- The official step by step guide – How to Teach Your Child to Wipe
- Stage 1 Setting the stage for actual wiping (the before wiping steps)
- Stage 2 Learning to actually wipe
- Stage 3 Independent wiping (Rafiki voice over it is time)
- Stage 4 Totally independent toileting
- This concludes “How to teach your child to wipe”
- Frequently Asked Question
How many articles exist on the Internet about how to potty train? A million? Maybe more. Everyone on Earth talks about helping kids learn to use the toilet… but where’s the help when it’s time for them to be independent with all their going needs?
Ahem.
No one talks to us about how to teach kids to wipe. NO ONE. Everyone says “make sure they can wipe their butt before school” but then no one actually shows up with information on how to make that happen.
Fine. I’ll do it. I will graphically and somehow eloquently explain “how to teach your child to wipe” and give you all the knowledge I’ve learned from three rounds of wipe-training.
Note: This post is based on cultural practices and norms around wiping that are specific to the United States (where bidets are uncommon and paper is flushed). I fully acknowledge that other practices and norms exist in other countries and cultures.
Let’s get down to brass tacks: this post is about butts
I vividly remember the day when, years after successfully potty training my first born, it hit me like lightning: “This child needs to learn to wipe on their own.”
And a dark cloud descended on my land.
No one had explained to me how to teach a child to wipe and everyone I asked had the same puzzled look or couldn’t remember from their days in the toileting years. “It sort of happens.” “They just learn.” “They’ll figure it out.”
I’m all for child-led learning – trust me, it’s literally my life’s work – but when poop is involved, that’s where I guess I draw the child-led line. I’d like to be a staring player in this learning process. My carpet, laundry, and gag reflex all depend on it.
Before starting this process with my oldest, I came up with a game plan. Turns out, I’m a pretty good planner and what I came up with has been the process for all of my kids, many of my friends’ kids, and lots more families who have dared to DM some lady on the Internet asking for a wiping tutorial (so much respect for those people – that takes guts).
So now I write this for all the world to see: A how-to guide on wiping butts – and somehow, this doesn’t feel that abnormal in my line of work.
What age should a kid be able to wipe themselves?
Age is but (lol) a number. There’s a lot more that goes into wiping than a chronological date stamp of “here your parent wipes for you” and “now you have to do it alone.”
Here’s what I considered with my kids:
- Can their arms reach? I was pretty shocked realizing how old many children are before they can “reach” the target. Check your child can reach before assuming they are ready for this skill.
- Are they dexterous enough? Do they have the coordination for this? Wiping takes a shocking amount of skills. This is why wiping is one of the last steps in potty training.
- Is the maturity level there? This is especially personal for each family but you are mostly looking for cues that your child can handle this fairly major responsibility.
For my kids, this was sometime from 4-5 (approximately), with the major goal being kindergarten-age. If your child is attending traditional school, they need to be able to wipe before going to school (this is a major and often surprising part of kindergarten readiness).
A quick note as a teacher:
Putting my teacher hat on over my parent hat right now: every year in kindergarten, it is heartbreaking for the kids who come to school without wiping skills. And many do.
There are often tears. It’s awful and gut wrenching, but legally, public school general educators are strictly forbidden from toileting students (this is different for many special educators who receive additional certification/clearance in toileting).
No matter how much I wished, wanted, or would have helped: I could not. Teachers cannot help. Please, please, please make sure part of your child’s kindergarten readiness is wiping.
RELATED: Looking for more non-academic kindergarten readiness skills? Read my list.
The official step by step guide – How to Teach Your Child to Wipe
Disclaimer: This is what worked for my family. Take it with a grain of salt, find ways to make it work for your family, or shrug me off completely.
I’m not trying to say that I’m an expert in the wiping field, but without too much TMI about my children, we are a “skid mark free” house. That feels like as good a credential as any for my wiping method.
I’m breaking this into STAGES because each stage needs time – how long is up to you and your child, and how it’s all going.
A lot of the wiping process is scaffolding and stepping kids through information that is both second nature to us AND that we have no memory learning ourselves. It’s tough to teach from that position, which is why I’m happy to share some guidance.
Stage 1: Setting the stage for actual wiping (the before wiping steps)
There are 3 “pre-wiping” steps to take a child through to set the stage for their independent wiping future.
1. How to fold toilet paper and how much to pull
First up on the road to wiping is understanding how to get toilet paper, how much to pull, and how to gather that paper for usage.
Before you ever ask your child to start wiping, ask them to start helping you with gathering the toilet paper. Show them how much to pull. Show them how to fold it (or crumple it if you’re a crumpler). Do this on repeat. Have them be the “puller and folder” of the toilet paper, and then pass the paper on to you. Teamwork makes the dream work.
Stay in this stage a while. Get your child really, really comfortable and fairly expert level at pulling and folding paper – don’t rush. Rushing or skipping this step is how toilets in your future get clogged.
2. Narrating the process
You are going to over share and over narrate the wiping process.
To kids, butts get wiped basically magically. They can’t exactly see what’s going on.
We know butts do not actually get wiped magically. There’s so much know-how and knowledge that goes into this (which you’ve probably never considered).
Talk openly about what you are doing when you wipe them. “I’m working front to back (explain why!).” “I’m checking the toilet paper to see if we are done.” “I’m refolding it to keep wiping from a clean spot.”
These are all parts of the wiping process that are second nature to adults, but kids need explicit teaching, modeling, and information about it to learn.
3. Consider an open door policy
If you are comfortable, an open door policy on your own wiping is very helpful. You don’t need to show them anything, per se, but letting them watch your process and hearing you narrate your own steps is big.
My feeling was always this: they’re in the bathroom with me anyways because heaven forbid I poop alone, why not make it educational?
Stage 2: Learning to actually wipe
Like I wrote earlier, for me, this was a very very “hit me like a ton of bricks” moment with each child. It’s like choosing a good melon, you just know when it’s time to teach them to wipe and it’s time to start handing over this step of independence to them.
As ridiculous as it may sound, wiping becomes one of (if not the) last bit of the baby we loved so much. Despite all the jokes about “I’m so tired of wiping butts!” – for many people, this is an emotional final step that closes the door on this child’s baby years.
I get that.
Stage 2 is all about scaffolding the wiping process.
Scaffolding is a term used in education that means “an adult is going to provide a lot of help to a child who is learning a new skill and scaffold their learning so they’re capable of success, then slowly start pulling back until the child is fully independent.”
That’s what we are going to do with wiping.
Now that they are experts at getting toilet paper and folding it, and you can see their arms are long enough, they’re dexterous, and the maturity is there: it’s time.
Scaffolding part 1: Wiping together, you do the most work.
Ask them to hold the toilet paper. You will need to (guess what) model how to do that. Show them how to hold the paper to prepare for wiping.
In this first step, they are going to have their hand on the toilet paper with your hand over the top of theirs. You will be doing the bulk of the work here, making their hand essentially an extension of yours. Think pottery scene from Ghost.
You will very specifically and openly narrate this process. Name the anus. Talk about how to clean it. Give them every single piece of information that you can about what you are doing, looking for, how to know you’re done, etc.
Again, in this first scaffolding phase, you are guiding their hand while wiping but you are leading this expedition and fully in control. Their hand is there to start learning what wiping feels like and the motions of this.
Stay at this stage of scaffolding as long as needed. Do not rush to the next stage for the next poo. Stay in “part 1” until you feel they are ready for part 2 of wiping number 2.
Scaffolding part 2: Wiping together, you work together.
In this second part of scaffolding, the child begins to take on a bit more of the wiping workload. With your hand still guiding theirs, take off some of the pressure so they are a bit more in control (though not fully yet).
Daily, you’ll adjust how much they are guiding the process as you quite literally begin to pull back.
Scaffolding part 3: Wiping together, they do the most work.
Have you ever seen a child on training wheels where the training wheels aren’t even touching the ground anymore, but the child won’t remove them because they like to know the training wheels are there?
That’s this stage. Your hand will now be lightly over their hand during the wiping process, doing little actual work (just moral support).
This is the stage in wiping where you start to see them “getting” it. You’ll feel and notice that you aren’t as involved. They’re doing it. You’re just there for support and any emergencies.
They’ve come a long way by this point. It’s almost time to wipe on their own.
Stage 3: Independent wiping (Rafiki voice over: it is time)
Don’t rush to independent wiping. There is no prize for rushing through the foundation of Stage 1 or the Scaffolding of Stage 2.
In fact, skid marks, itchy butts, and bathroom messes befall rushing…
When your child is ready for full independent wiping (ie: your hand is no longer with theirs wiping – you’re just sort of there), here’s what I do.
- For the first few independent wipe attempts, stay in the bathroom. Be the cheerleader on the sidelines.
- Give a “courtesy” wipe (kind of like a spot check) before they get up.
The Courtesy Wipe is actually crucial for multiple reasons.
The Courtesy Wipe gives you a way to support your child so they don’t feel totally hung out to dry on this process. You’re still scaffolding and they have a safety net.
The Courtesy Wipe gives you a chance to “spot check” how they did and offer additional support immediately.
If you notice that Courtesy Wipes are consistently not clean, go back to Stage 2: Scaffolding. We want them to master this skill, not rush to a “faux-mastery” level. It’s much more comfortable to go back a stage than press on.
Stage 4: Totally independent toileting
Eventually, you’ll phase out the Courtesy Wipe and that’ll be it. Your days of wiping this child have come to a close.
And thus closes one major chapter in parenting.
This concludes “How to teach your child to wipe”
…A blog post I never thought I’d write, but I’m glad I did because no one talks about this. So let’s change that.
If you use my method, or have one of your own for teaching kids, comment below so we can give other parents even more tips/tricks for helping kids with this often overlooked skill.
Frequently Asked Question
Clogging is tough and it’s part of learning to manage how much toilet paper is being used. It’s also part of understanding the pipes in your home or building, and what it can handle. If the child is comfortable, teaching them to flush after a set number of wiping tries is an option to help limit the amount of TP trying to go down all at once.
This happens. Bodies, arm length, and age for schools that require toileting. In this scenario, work on a between the legs method for wiping to minimize the distance needed. With this method, just make sure to continue emphasizing front to back wiping to avoid infections.
Totally up to you and your methods. Everyone has a different method for this part so it’s best to teach your child how you wipe.
Absolutely! Just make sure they are also comfortable with regular toilet paper. Public bathrooms and school restrooms don’t have wipes so we need to make sure to build in some flexibility here to use what is available.









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Devon says
This โcrackedโ me up. Well written and not information you can find anywhere else.
Kayla Marie says
I teach this in my Primary classroom, itโs incredible how many children come to school unable to wipe themselves! I am not able to be in the bathroom with my students, so instead we learn this skill during our morning meeting. I saw on TikTok a teacher who taped two balloons to a chair to make a bum and showed her students that way โ so thatโs what I did! We learned how to fold the toilet paper, how to twist around and wipe, how to keep wiping with a clean spot. The most important part was we made a rule of a โcourtesy flushโ when they first poo, because our pipes are tiny and if they put TP down with the poo the toilets always clog. Then they get 4 wipes, another flush, and 4 more wipes if needed. It worked so well and we talked about it over several weeks of school. Parents are always so grateful, but I still wish they came to school with these skills! Especially since we canโt help in the bathroom, just coaching from the doorway.
Sydney says
This may be a silly question, but here we go! They should still be sitting right? I mean right now my son is 4.5 and he does most of his own wiping, but I think he stands up to wipe. Maybe because when I help, he is standing??
Mona says
This is very helpful, thank you for putting it in perspective. We are a family (in the US) who use a bidet for extra cleanliness. I use it on my young kids as well. However while potty training them I would use a spray bottle to make sure I got them very clean. I donโt quite understand getting a full clean with just toilet paper but these tips are really helpful. Love the scaffolding analogy!
E. Frank says
Quite right you areโI myself have commented on the lack of this information on potty learning. Shame. Entertaining and helpful. Kudos.
Ashley French says
Thank you so much for writing this! I needed this info and the process sounds so doable!
Brittney says
You are a true American hero!
Stephanie says
Thank you sooo much for this. I have a 2.5 yr old and am planning to send him to a school next year that needs him to be potty trained and fully able to wipe. Iโve been slowly researching and have been sooo nervous esp about the learning to wipe part so Iโm very grateful that your post came at the perfect time! Thank you again for all that you doo. (;
Kaitlyn says
Thank you so much for this, weโve been really struggling teaching this skill.
Star says
Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! My oldest starts school in September and I had no idea how to teach this. Tried the other day to no avail. I will start your process tomorrow and I know it will be fabulous! This mama is grateful for this โlady on the internet ๐๐ปโ
Katherine Marshall says
THANK YOU for this. It makes sense, itโs what I would probably do, but reading it in your relaxed way of writing it makes me feel so good about undertaking this process. Youโre AMAZING!
Nisha says
Thank you for this!!! Really helpful!
chelsey geraghty says
While it may have been a blog you never thought your write, Iโm so grateful that you did!! Wiping is one of the many mysteries of parenting that leaves me wondering, yet again, how on earth millions of babies are born every day and yet I am JUST NOW figuring this out BY MYSELF!?! Anyway, I guess I can now cross wiping off that list – thank you!
Nicole D. says
Thank you for this post!! Kindergarten starts in a month and Iโve been dreading this, not knowing where to start.
Siri says
When should I get rid of the “little potty” and have the kid go on the regular toilet? She’s almost 3 and we’re still on the little trainer one. Also, thanks for writing this, I’ve been wondering when we should begin the wiping tutorial!
Alex Enchev says
We put a baby seat on our regular toilet ariund that age and it’s been great x
Mada Jaafar says
i bow to you ๐๐ปโโ๏ธ๐๐ปโโ๏ธ
Whitney Lindhe says
My God you are an angel! You just helped me ease anxiety I didnโt even know I had yet. We just potty trained a month ago. Also, this part couldnโt be more true: โ My feeling was always this: theyโre in here anyways with me because heaven forbid I poop alone, why not make it educational?โ Thank you for this!!
Sarah says
This is brilliant! Thank you!
Ashlee Pimpas says
Absolutely incredible! Bravo! You’re correct that no one writes about this. But you have given a brilliant tutorial. I am in awe!
Julie says
Oh my goodness! The blog post I didnโt know I needed! My son is 5 and it suddenly dawned on me recently that heโs not learning to wipe himself and Iโm going to have to teach him. Cue the sweat pouring out of my forehead. I have never even heard this discussed before and it never occurred to me that this part of parenting would make me feel so lost and terrified. Whatโs even more shocking is that I just got done reading a blog post about wiping butts and was in tears because you reminded me that my my last shred of โbaby dutyโ is coming to an end. ๐ญ THANK YOU for this very helpful and touching post!