Last updated: 2026-03-19 · Potty Training Help

Do Some Parents Genuinely Not Know They're Supposed to Potty Train?

It's rare, but it happens. Most parents know potty training is something they need to do — but a meaningful number are genuinely uncertain about when, how, or whether their child is ready. True unawareness exists at the margins; confusion, misinformation, and lack of support are far more common.

What Educators Are Actually Observing

Early childhood education professionals sometimes encounter parents who seem genuinely surprised that toilet training is expected before school enrollment. These situations stand out precisely because they're unusual. When they occur, they tend to cluster around a few specific profiles:

More Common: Knowing But Not Knowing How

The more frequently observed scenario isn't "didn't know" — it's "knew but didn't know how." Parents who:

These families know training is their job. They're just stuck, confused, or burnt out. They need practical guidance, not judgment.

If you're an educator reading this: The most effective intervention is concrete, practical, and non-shaming. "Here's a simple approach that works for a lot of families — would it help to try this?" goes further than expressing frustration about the child's state. Parents who feel judged shut down; parents who feel supported ask for help.

What Parents Can Do If They're Behind

If your child is 3 or older and hasn't started training yet, it's not too late — but starting now matters. A few principles that help:

For families starting late or restarting: A child-worn timer is one of the most effective tools for building the toilet habit quickly. The Benny Bradley's Potty Training Watch vibrates and lights up on a set schedule, reminding the child to try — consistently, without the parent having to remember. Available for girls and boys, or as a bundle with a board book.