catching skills
When a child isn't catching yet: a caregiver's guide
Catching is an advanced motor skill that develops later than throwing or rolling — most children trap a large ball against their chest before catching with their hands, often into the preschool years. A caregiver should keep play easy and fun with big, soft, slow balls, and watch the wider picture of movement, vision and coordination. This is not a diagnosis; arrange a calm developmental check if catching difficulty travels with broad clumsiness or other motor, vision or coordination delays.
Catching a ball is a beautiful blend of watching, timing and reaching — and it blooms a little later than throwing or rolling, so a child who isn't catching yet is very often right on their own gentle path.
In short
Catching is a more advanced motor skill that develops gradually — most children first trap a large ball against their chest before they ever catch with their hands, and this can take well into the preschool years. If a child in your care isn't catching yet, the most helpful thing you can do is keep playing, make it easy and fun, and watch the whole picture of their movement, vision and coordination. This isn't a diagnosis — it's simply a cue to support practice and, if other skills lag too, to arrange a calm developmental check.What to watch
Catching builds on earlier steps. Look gently at where the child is in the sequence:- Tracks a moving object — do their eyes follow a slowly rolled or tossed ball?
- Traps before catching — can they hug a large, soft ball against their body? This comes well before catching with hands.
- Brings hands together — do they reach and ready their arms when a ball comes near?
- The wider picture — are running, jumping, throwing and balance coming along, or is movement broadly behind?
Gentle flags worth a clinician's eye: very little interest in or response to moving objects, marked clumsiness across many activities, or catching difficulty alongside delays in other motor, vision or coordination skills.
The science
Catching needs visual tracking, anticipation, hand-eye coordination and quick postural control to all work together — which is why it matures later than simpler skills. Big, soft, slow balls and short, playful turns let a child practise each ingredient successfully. Most children grow this with everyday play; a few benefit from a closer look.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online checklist. Our team looks at how catching skills fit within a child's whole movement story, and our occupational therapy clinicians can build coordination through joyful, structured play.Trusted sources
CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestones on ball play and motor development; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on gross-motor growth in early childhood; WHO ICF framework (d4, mobility) for movement-related activities.Next step — Keep the games going and trust what you notice. Find a Pinnacle centre for a warm, clear review of the child's movement milestones if catching lags alongside other skills.
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.
What to watch
Watch whether the child tracks a moving ball, traps a large soft ball against their chest, and readies their hands to reach. Seek a developmental check if there's little interest in moving objects, marked clumsiness across many activities, or catching difficulty alongside delays in other motor, vision or coordination skills.
Try this at home
Start with a big, soft, lightweight ball and stand close. Toss it gently into their chest so they can 'trap' it first — celebrate every catch and hug. Shorten the distance and slow the throw until they succeed, then build up.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 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
At what age should a child be able to catch a ball?
Catching develops gradually. Many children first trap a large ball against their chest in the toddler years and only catch reliably with their hands well into the preschool years. There's a wide normal range, so practice and patience matter more than a fixed age.
How can I help a child learn to catch?
Use a big, soft, slow ball and stand close. Let them trap it against their chest first, then gradually move back and use smaller balls as they succeed. Keep turns short, playful and full of praise — success builds confidence and coordination.
When should I be concerned that a child isn't catching?
Catching alone is rarely a worry. Arrange a developmental check if the child shows little interest in moving objects, is broadly clumsy across many activities, or if catching difficulty comes alongside delays in other motor, vision or coordination skills.