Pretend Play RolePlay
Pretend Play & Role-Play With Your Child at Home
Build pretend play at home by following your child's lead, joining their game, and adding one new idea or word at a time. Use everyday role-play — kitchen, doctor, shop, bus — with simple household props. Keep it short, joyful and shared; this grows language, social understanding and imagination.
The best learning often looks exactly like play — a teddy having tea, a doll going to the doctor, a cardboard box becoming a rocket.
In short
Pretend play (also called role-play or make-believe) is one of the richest ways your child builds language, social understanding and flexible thinking. You can grow it at home with simple props, by following your child's lead, and by gently adding a new idea or word into their game. No special toys are needed — household objects work beautifully.Easy ways to build pretend play at home
Start where your child already is- Watch what they do with a toy, then join in alongside them rather than taking over.
- Copy their action first ("You're feeding teddy — yum!"), then add one small idea ("Shall teddy have a nap now?").
Everyday role-play scripts that work
- Kitchen play — cook, stir, pour, serve a meal; name foods and actions.
- Doctor or hospital — bandage a doll, listen to teddy's heart; great for easing real-world fears.
- Shop or market — swap "money", say please and thank you, count items.
- Bus, train or car — line up chairs, take tickets, wave goodbye.
Make it richer over time
- Offer open-ended props — boxes, cloths, blocks, spoons — that can "become" many things.
- Take turns and pause expectantly so your child fills the gap with a word or action.
- Add a small problem to solve ("Oh no, teddy's hurt his leg — what shall we do?").
- Keep sessions short and joyful; 5–10 minutes of shared, smiling play beats a long, pushed one.
Why this matters
Pretend play stretches imagination, sequencing and the ability to hold an idea in mind — and it is one of the earliest places children practise seeing things from another's point of view. If by around 18–24 months your child shows little interest in make-believe even with your lead, it is worth a friendly developmental check — not a cause for alarm, simply a good time to look more closely.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — home play is for connection and growth, not assessment. Our therapists weave pretend play and role-play into goals across communication and social skills, often alongside speech therapy, and track each child's progress through the AbilityScore®.Trusted sources
Guidance here reflects child-development principles from the American Academy of Pediatrics and its HealthyChildren resource, and the CDC's developmental milestone guidance on play and social communication.Next step — try one 10-minute pretend-play game today, and if you'd like personalised activities, book a developmental assessment with Pinnacle Blooms Network.
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
If by around 18–24 months your child shows little interest in make-believe even when you lead the game, or rarely uses objects symbolically (a block as a phone, a spoon to feed teddy), book a friendly developmental check — it is a good time to look more closely, not a cause for alarm.
Try this at home
Copy your child's play action first, then add just one new idea — "You're feeding teddy, now shall he have a nap?" One small addition keeps the game theirs while gently stretching it.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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 should pretend play start?
Simple pretend often emerges around 12–18 months — feeding a doll, pretending to drink from an empty cup. Richer role-play with stories and pretend characters usually grows from about 2–3 years. Every child unfolds at their own pace.
My child only lines up toys instead of playing pretend — should I worry?
Lining up and sorting is a normal part of how many children explore. Gently join in and add a small pretend idea on top. If make-believe stays absent by around 18–24 months even with your lead, a friendly developmental check is worthwhile — reassuring, not alarming.
Do I need special toys for pretend play?
Not at all. Open-ended household items — boxes, cloths, spoons, cushions — are often better than fancy toys because they can become many different things, which stretches your child's imagination further.
How long should a pretend-play session be?
Short and joyful wins. Five to ten minutes of shared, smiling play does more than a long session that feels pushed. Follow your child's energy and stop while it's still fun.