Non-Verbal / Minimally Verbal Presentation
Are girls more likely to be non-verbal or minimally verbal?
Girls are not more likely to have a non-verbal or minimally verbal presentation — this profile is actually identified more often in boys. The real risk for girls is later recognition, because their differences can be subtler. A girl with limited speech deserves the same prompt developmental check, established only at a Pinnacle centre under clinician care.
One of the quietest worries parents carry is whether their daughter's speech delay is being missed simply because she's a girl — let's look honestly at what the evidence says.
In short
No — girls are not more likely to have a non-verbal or minimally verbal presentation. If anything, this profile is seen more often in boys, simply because autism and several developmental conditions linked with limited spoken language are diagnosed more frequently in boys overall. But here is the important part: girls are more likely to be overlooked or diagnosed later, because their differences can be subtler and more easily masked. So a girl who is non-verbal or minimally verbal deserves exactly the same prompt attention — never a wait-and-see.What the evidence actually shows
A non-verbal or minimally verbal presentation means a child communicates with very few or no spoken words — though they may communicate richly in other ways, through gesture, sounds, eye contact, pictures or devices. It is a presentation, not a diagnosis in itself, and it can sit alongside autism, global developmental delay, hearing differences or speech-motor difficulties.Across populations, conditions associated with this profile are identified more often in boys. The risk for girls is the opposite of what your question feared: girls are sometimes assumed to be "just shy" or "a late talker", and their need for support is recognised later than it should be. A girl's limited speech is never less significant than a boy's — it simply warrants the same clear, timely look.
When to seek a check
Set sex aside and watch the child in front of you. Worth a developmental check at any age: no babble or gesture by 12 months, no single words by 16 months, no two-word phrases by 24 months, or any loss of words or sounds a child once used. Persistent parental concern is itself a strong reason to ask — trust it.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a checklist, an app or a child's sex. A structured, clinician-led assessment looks at how your child communicates across every channel, then builds a plan around her real strengths. Explore how we support speech and communication, understand what the AbilityScore is and how it is established, or start at [our home for families](/).Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 and the ICF framework on functioning and communication; CDC developmental milestone guidance; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association resources on late talkers and minimally verbal communication.Next step — If your daughter (or son) is using few or no words, don't wait on assumptions — book a developmental screen with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
No babble or gesture by 12 months, no single words by 16 months, no two-word phrases by 24 months, or any loss of words or sounds — regardless of whether your child is a girl or boy.
Try this at home
Notice and respond to every way your daughter communicates — a glance, a point, a sound — not just spoken words. Naming what she shows you ("You want the cup!") builds the bridge to speech.
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
Are girls really less likely to be non-verbal than boys?
Conditions linked with a non-verbal or minimally verbal presentation, such as autism, are diagnosed more often in boys, so this profile is seen more in boys overall. Girls are not more likely to have it — but they are more likely to be recognised later, which is why prompt attention matters just as much for a daughter.
Why are girls sometimes diagnosed later?
Girls can present more subtly and may mask differences, so a quiet or minimally verbal girl is sometimes assumed to be shy or a late talker. This delays support. The same milestones and concerns should trigger a developmental check in girls as in boys.
Does minimally verbal mean my daughter will never speak?
No. Minimally verbal describes how a child communicates today, not a permanent state. Many children develop spoken language with the right support, and others thrive using gestures, pictures or communication devices alongside speech. A clinician-led plan focuses on growing communication in every form.