Developmental Coordination Disorder
Do boys show Developmental Coordination Disorder differently?
Boys are diagnosed with DCD two to three times more often than girls, but this mostly reflects how visibly their difficulties show up — in sport, play and handwriting — rather than a true sex difference. Girls' quieter struggles are more easily missed. The condition itself is the same; only a clinician can confirm it.
You've noticed your boy seems clumsier than his friends — tripping, struggling with buttons, last picked for games — and you're wondering if it's just him, or something more.
In short
Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) is diagnosed more often in boys than girls — roughly two to three times as often. But this likely reflects how it shows up and gets noticed, not that boys truly carry it more. Boys' difficulties tend to surface in active, visible ways — sport, rough-and-tumble play, messy handwriting — so they get flagged. Girls can be just as affected, but their quieter struggles (slower dressing, neat-but-laboured writing) are more easily missed. The motor difficulty itself is the same condition in both.How it can look in boys
DCD is about everyday motor skills being well below what's expected for age, without another medical cause. In boys this often appears as:- On the playground — avoiding ball games, climbing or cycling; being seen as the "clumsy" or "lazy" one
- At the desk — slow, effortful, hard-to-read handwriting; tiring quickly when writing
- Self-care — fumbling with buttons, laces, zips and cutlery long after peers
- Behaviour — frustration, opting out of activities, or acting up to dodge tasks that feel impossible
The key word is persistent. Every child has clumsy days. A lasting pattern across home and school, interfering with daily life, is the real flag.
Why the difference matters
Because boys are spotted more readily, an affected girl may go years without help — and a quiet, capable boy can also slip through if his coordination struggles are mistaken for not trying. Naming the pattern, in either child, is what opens the door to support. With practice and the right strategies, children with DCD make genuine, lasting gains in confidence and skill.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 description or a checklist. Our occupational therapists look at your child's own pattern of strengths and challenges, rule out other causes first, and build a plan around real daily skills. Explore occupational therapy, learn how the AbilityScore is formed, or start at [our home](/).Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (6A04, Developmental Motor Coordination Disorder); European Academy of Childhood Disability (EACD) recommendations on DCD; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on motor development.Next step — Worry is a good reason to check. Book a coordination and motor-skills screen with a Pinnacle occupational therapist.
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 for a lasting pattern, not one clumsy day: difficulty across both home and school, growing frustration or avoidance of physical tasks, or your child opting out of play and sport because it feels too hard. Seek a check sooner if writing or self-care lags well behind peers.
Try this at home
Build motor confidence through play your son already enjoys — threading, building blocks, throwing a ball at a target, or helping in the kitchen. Keep it short, fun and praise the effort, not the result. Little wins rebuild the confidence that clumsiness can chip away.
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
Is DCD really more common in boys?
Boys are diagnosed about two to three times more often than girls, but experts believe this largely reflects how visibly boys' difficulties show up — in active play, sport and handwriting — rather than a true difference in how often the condition occurs. Girls are likely under-identified because their struggles are quieter.
Could my son just be lazy or careless?
DCD is not about effort or attitude. Children with it often work harder than peers to manage everyday motor tasks and may avoid them out of frustration, which can be mistaken for laziness. A clinician can tell the difference.
At what age can DCD be assessed?
Motor coordination difficulties become clearer once a child is past the toddler years, usually from around age 5 onwards, when expectations for handwriting, dressing and sport increase. A qualified occupational therapist can assess the pattern and rule out other causes.
Will my son grow out of it?
DCD tends to persist without support, but children make real, lasting gains with the right strategies and practice. Early identification and targeted help build both skill and confidence.