vestibular processing
If a child isn't yet showing vestibular processing
Vestibular processing is how a child's brain reads movement, balance and head position. If a child in your care avoids or craves movement, seems unsteady or fearful, or struggles with balance, observe calmly and bring it to a clinician — this is a reason to check early, not a diagnosis. Vestibular skills grow through playful movement, and gentle occupational-therapy support helps when needed.
A child who isn't yet confident with movement, balance or being lifted and tilted is showing you something worth gently noticing — and that noticing is good caregiving.
In short
Vestibular processing is how a child's brain makes sense of movement, balance, head position and gravity — the inner-ear sense that tells us we're tilting, spinning or upright. If a child in your care doesn't yet seem to register or enjoy movement, or seems unusually wary or unsteady, this is something to observe calmly and bring to a clinician — not a diagnosis. Vestibular skills develop gradually through everyday play, and a gentle developmental check can show whether extra support would help.What to watch
Vestibular processing develops across the early years, so much variation is typical. Bring these to a clinician's eye if they persist or get in the way of play:- Avoids movement — distressed by swinging, tilting, being lifted, going down slides or having feet leave the ground.
- Craves movement — constantly spinning, rocking, jumping or never seeming dizzy, in a way that crowds out other play.
- Unsteady or fearful — frequent falls, bumping into things, holding on tightly on stairs, or seeming anxious on uneven ground.
- Poor balance — struggles to sit steadily, stand on one leg, or keep posture for their age.
- Travels with other differences — delays in talking, social connection or other motor milestones.
The science
The vestibular system (ICF code b156) works closely with vision and the body's position sense to keep us oriented and balanced. It matures through repeated, joyful movement experiences — being rocked, swung, tilted and carried. Occupational therapists support it through graded, playful movement that helps the brain learn to read these signals comfortably and confidently.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 list. Our occupational therapy team observes how a child responds to movement and shapes safe, sensory play around their comfort. You can read more about vestibular processing and how we nurture it.Trusted sources
WHO ICF framework on vestibular function (b156); American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on movement and sensory development; ASHA and CDC developmental-monitoring resources.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a calm, clear review of your child's movement and balance.
What to watch
Watch for a child who avoids movement (swings, slides, being lifted), or craves it endlessly (spinning, never dizzy), or who is unsteady, falls often, fears uneven ground, or struggles to balance. Seek a developmental check if these persist, crowd out play, or travel with delays in talking, social connection or other motor skills — early support works well.
Try this at home
Offer gentle, choice-led movement play — slow swinging, rocking on your lap, tummy time over a cushion — and let the child set the pace. Keep a short note of which movements they enjoy and which they avoid; this gives a clinician a clear, useful picture.
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
What is vestibular processing in simple terms?
It's how a child's brain makes sense of movement, balance and head position — the inner-ear sense that tells us we're tilting, spinning or staying upright. It helps a child sit steadily, walk confidently and enjoy active play.
Should I worry if a child avoids swings and slides?
Not on its own — many children are simply cautious. It's worth a clinician's gentle look if the avoidance is intense, persists, gets in the way of play, or comes alongside unsteadiness or other developmental delays. This is a reason to check, not a diagnosis.
How can I help a child's vestibular skills at home?
Offer gentle, choice-led movement play — slow swinging, rocking, tummy time and being carried in different positions — letting the child set the pace. If they seem distressed or it isn't progressing, an occupational therapist can guide safe, playful steps.