What Age Do Babies Eyes Change From Blue To Brown?
Pieter Maas
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– Your baby’s first birthday is a significant milestone, especially if they get to dive into a cake for the first time. But it’s also about the age you can safely say your baby’s eye color is set. “Typically, a baby’s eyes can change color during the first year of life,” says Benjamin Bert, MD, an ophthalmologist at Memorial Care Orange Coast Medical Center.
- However, Daniel Ganjian, MD, a pediatrician at Providence Saint John’s Health Center, says the most significant changes in color occur between 3 and 6 months.
- But the hue you see at 6 months may still be a work in progress — which means you should wait a few months (or more) before filling in the eye color section of the baby book.
Although you can’t predict the exact age your baby’s eye color will be permanent, the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) says most babies have the eye color that will last their lifetime by the time they’re about 9 months old. However, some can take up to 3 years to settle into a permanent eye color.
63% brown20.8% blue 5.7% green/hazel9.9% indeterminate0.5% partial heterochromia (a variation in coloration)
The researchers also found that there were significantly more white/Caucasian infants with blue eyes and more Asian, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, and Black/African American infants with brown eyes. Now that you have a better understanding of when your baby’s eyes may change color (and become permanent), you might be wondering what’s going on behind the scenes to make this transformation occur.
When can you tell if baby’s eyes will be brown?
What Color Eyes Are Babies Born With? – The color of babies’ irises actually depends on melanin, a protein secreted by special cells called melanocytes that also give your baby’s skin its color. Babies whose heritage is dark-skinned are usually born with brown eyes, whereas Caucasian newborns tend to be born with blue or gray eyes.
- Since melanocytes respond to light, at birth a baby may have eyes that appear gray or blue mostly due to the lack of pigment and because he’s been in a dark womb up until now.
- As he’s exposed to more light, over time (even several years) his eye color can change.
- If the melanocytes secrete just a little more melanin, this baby may end up with blue eyes.
Just a little more melanin and his eyes will be green or hazel. Brown eyes, which are the most common, are the result of very active melanocytes secreting lots of melanin. Brown eyes are likely to remain brown throughout life. It takes about a year for the melanocytes to finish their job and for the final color to come in.
Can a blue eyed babies eyes turn brown?
Are All Babies Born with Blue Eyes? – You’ve probably heard that all babies are born with blue eyes—but experts say it’s a myth. “Babies are born with all different colored eyes. Some have dark eyes already and some have blue,” says Mohamad S. Jaafar, MD, a pediatric ophthalmologist and chief of the division of ophthalmology at Children’s National Health System in Washington, DC.
- It’s not a hard-and-fast rule, but Caucasian babies tend to be born with lighter eyes, while those of African-American, Asian and Hispanic descent are usually born with brown or dark brown eyes, even eyes that look black.
- Your child’s newborn eye color may be blue, but that doesn’t mean it’ll necessarily stay that way.
“Babies’ eyes tend to change color sometime between 6 and 12 months, but it can take as long as three years until you see the true color of what their eyes are going to be,” says Barbara Cohlan, MD, a neonatologist at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. As a general rule of thumb, baby eye color tends to get darker if it changes.
Do blue eyes go over power brown?
The brown-eye gene is dominant and overrides the blue-eye gene, so all the children have brown eyes. However, if the father also carries a blue-eye gene and a child inherits one from each parent, that child will have blue eyes.
How long do blue eyes last in babies?
When does a baby’s eye color change? – The most dramatic eye color changes will probably occur when your child is between the ages of 3 and 6 months old. By that point, the iris has stashed enough pigment so you’ll be able to better predict what the final hue will be.
- But even so, your baby’s eye color may still hold some surprises.
- Your baby’s eye color may continue going through a number of changes due to pigmentation of the iris until baby’s first birthday, and you may still notice subtle eye color changes (green eyes slowly turning hazel, say, or hazel ones deepening into brown) until she’s 3 years old.
Just don’t expect brown eyes to revert to blue — dark eyes tend to stay dark for most babies. Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) infants are more likely to be born with dark, usually brown, eyes, though the shade may change slightly during the first year.