ADHD
Can you tell if a 6–9-month-old has ADHD?
At six to nine months, ADHD cannot be diagnosed — a baby's attention and activity are still developing normally. Clinicians don't evaluate for ADHD before about age 4. Track general milestones instead, and have any genuine developmental delay checked early.
Take a breath — at six to nine months, there is no such thing as a diagnosable case of ADHD, and a wriggly, distractible baby is almost always just a baby.
In short
ADHD cannot be identified in infancy. A baby's attention span, impulse control and activity level are still forming, so the behaviours that define ADHD simply don't apply yet. Clinicians do not evaluate for ADHD until at least age 4, when behaviour can be compared meaningfully to peers across home and other settings. What you can do now is track general development — and if anything feels off, have it checked.What is actually age-appropriate at 6–9 months
At this stage, healthy babies are meant to be highly active and unable to sustain attention — that is normal neurological development, not a warning sign. Instead of watching for "ADHD", watch the broad milestones:1. Social — sharing smiles, seeking your face, beginning to respond to her name.
2. Communication — babbling, taking turns with sounds, responding to your voice.
3. Motor — sitting, reaching, transferring objects hand to hand.
4. Hearing and vision — startling to sound, tracking objects and faces.
A delay in these is far more meaningful at this age than any worry about attention.
The Pinnacle way
We don't put an infant through an attention "test". We look at the whole child across every developmental domain and, where useful, a clinician at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre uses the AbilityScore® to map strengths and gaps and decide whether anything needs support. If attention concerns are still present closer to preschool age, that is the right moment to look harder — see our guide to ADHD. 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.Trusted sources
The WHO ICD-11 framework classifies ADHD (6A05) as a disorder identified in childhood, not infancy; the AAP's developmental-milestone guidance is the right yardstick for a baby this age.Next step — if any milestone feels behind, book a free developmental check; if not, simply keep tracking. Book a developmental check.
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
Can a baby be diagnosed with ADHD?
No. ADHD involves patterns of attention and impulse control that can only be judged from around age 4, once a child is compared to peers across settings. Infant restlessness is normal development.
What should I watch instead at 6–9 months?
Watch social smiling and response to name, babbling, sitting and reaching, and clear responses to sound and sight. A delay in these is worth a developmental check.