Developmental Profile 4
At what age is the DP-4 used for a child?
The Developmental Profile 4 (DP-4) is a structured developmental assessment used across a wide age range — from birth (around 0 months) up to 12 years and 11 months. Completed with caregiver input and a trained professional, it builds a profile across physical, adaptive, social-emotional, cognitive and communication domains. It is one tool within a wider clinical review, never a standalone diagnosis.
One assessment, a remarkably wide age window — from a child's earliest days right through to the cusp of adulthood.
In short
The Developmental Profile 4 (DP-4) is used across a very broad age range — from birth (around 0 months) up to 12 years and 11 months of age. It is a structured developmental assessment, completed with input from parents or caregivers and a trained professional, that gives a picture of how a child is developing across several everyday areas. Because it spans infancy through the early school years, it can be used to review a child at almost any point in early childhood.What the DP-4 looks at
The DP-4 is not a single skill test — it builds a profile across several developmental domains together, typically physical (motor) skills, adaptive behaviour and self-care, social-emotional development, cognitive skills, and communication. Drawing on what a caregiver knows about the child day to day, alongside professional observation, it helps map where a child's strengths sit and where extra support might help. Its wide age band (birth to 12 years 11 months) is one reason it is valued — the same framework can track a child across the years that matter most for early development. It is best understood as one tool among several a clinician may draw on, never a standalone label.When it is used
A professional may choose the DP-4 when a fuller developmental picture is helpful — for example during a developmental review, when a parent or teacher raises a concern, or to understand a child's profile across many areas at once. The result is a starting point for understanding, not a verdict, and it is always interpreted within a wider clinical assessment of the whole child.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. Our clinicians may draw on tools such as the Developmental Profile 4 as part of a broader, whole-child review, and build an individualised plan that can include supports like occupational therapy where helpful.Trusted sources
WHO Nurturing Care Framework on early childhood development; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren guidance on developmental milestones and screening; CDC developmental milestone resources.Next step — If you would like a clear, professional picture of how your child is developing, book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre.
What to watch
Persistent gaps compared with peers in motor skills, communication, self-care, social-emotional development or thinking and learning as your child grows from infancy through the early school years.
Try this at home
Keep a simple note of the everyday things your child can do — words used, steps managed, how they play and share. These small observations help a professional get an accurate, fuller picture during any developmental review.
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 does the DP-4 cover?
The Developmental Profile 4 (DP-4) is used from birth (around 0 months) up to 12 years and 11 months, making it suitable across infancy and the early school years.
Who completes the DP-4?
It is completed with input from a parent or caregiver who knows the child well, alongside a trained professional who administers and interprets it within a wider review.
Is the DP-4 a diagnosis?
No. It is one developmental assessment tool that builds a profile of a child's skills. Any diagnosis is formed only by a qualified clinician within a full clinical assessment, never from a single tool.
What areas does the DP-4 assess?
It looks across several domains together — typically physical and motor skills, adaptive and self-care, social-emotional, cognitive, and communication development.