Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, 2nd Ed
At what age is the BRIEF-2 used for a child?
The BRIEF-2 (Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, Second Edition) is a questionnaire used for children and young people aged about 5 to 18 years. Parent and teacher forms cover ages 5-18, and a self-report form is for ages roughly 11-18. It gathers everyday observations of executive function — how a child plans, remembers, organises, controls impulses and manages emotions. It is not used for babies or toddlers, and a clinician always interprets it alongside other information.
A questionnaire that helps grown-ups understand how a child manages everyday "thinking skills" — and it spans most of childhood into the teenage years.
In short
The BRIEF-2 (Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, Second Edition) is used for children and young people aged roughly 5 to 18 years. It is a structured questionnaire — completed by parents and teachers, with a self-report version for older children — that gathers everyday observations of executive function: how a child remembers, plans, organises, controls impulses and manages emotions. It is not a test the child sits, and it is not for babies or toddlers.What it looks at and how it works
Executive functions are the brain's "behind-the-scenes manager" — the skills a child uses to hold instructions in mind, switch between tasks, get started on homework, keep their bag tidy or pause before reacting. Because these skills show up most clearly once a child is at school, the BRIEF-2 begins at age 5, when classroom and home demands make differences easier to notice.The parent and teacher forms cover ages 5 to 18, while a self-report form lets young people aged about 11 to 18 describe their own experience. Adults rate how often certain everyday behaviours happen, and a qualified clinician interprets the pattern alongside other information — never the score alone.
When it is appropriate
BRIEF-2 is helpful when a child of school age is showing difficulties with attention, organisation, getting started, emotional control or remembering instructions, and a clinician wants a structured picture across home and school. For a child under 5, this particular questionnaire is not used; everyday play, language and developmental milestones are watched instead, and a general developmental check is the right starting point.The Pinnacle way
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. A tool like the BRIEF-2 is one part of a fuller picture our clinicians build, supported where helpful by occupational therapy to strengthen organisation, attention and everyday self-management skills.Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on developmental milestones and school-age skills; the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on attention, language and learning in children.Next step — Wondering whether your school-age child's organisation or attention needs a closer look? Book a developmental assessment and let a clinician gently map their strengths and needs.
What to watch
In school-age children (5+), notice ongoing difficulty starting tasks, staying organised, remembering instructions, controlling impulses or managing emotions across both home and school.
Try this at home
Help build executive skills with simple routines: a visible checklist for the morning, breaking homework into small steps, and a calm pause-and-think habit before reacting.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What age range is the BRIEF-2 for?
The BRIEF-2 is used for children and young people aged roughly 5 to 18 years. Parent and teacher forms cover ages 5-18, and there is a self-report form for older children aged about 11 to 18.
Can the BRIEF-2 be used for toddlers or babies?
No. The BRIEF-2 begins at age 5, when school and home demands make executive-function differences easier to observe. For younger children, everyday play, language and developmental milestones are watched instead, and a general developmental check is the right starting point.
Is the BRIEF-2 a test the child sits?
No — it is a questionnaire completed by parents and teachers, with a self-report version for older children. A qualified clinician interprets the pattern of answers alongside other information, never the score on its own.
What does the BRIEF-2 measure?
It captures everyday executive functions: how a child plans, organises, remembers instructions, gets started on tasks, switches between activities, controls impulses and manages emotions.