Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Supporting the Siblings of a Child with ODD
Siblings of a child with Oppositional Defiant Disorder are best supported by validating their feelings, giving each child protected one-to-one time, keeping family rules fair and consistent, explaining the behaviour in age-appropriate words, and avoiding making siblings into junior parents. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
When one child needs extra support, the brothers and sisters quietly carry a lot too — and they deserve to be seen, heard and held.
In short
Siblings of a child with Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) often feel a confusing mix of love, frustration, guilt and being overlooked. You can support them by naming those feelings as normal, giving each child predictable one-to-one time, keeping rules fair and consistent across the family, and making sure their needs are not always second to the conflict. Siblings thrive when they understand they are not to blame and that the difficult behaviour is something the whole family is being helped with.How to support siblings well
- Give feelings a safe home — let them say "I'm angry", "it's not fair", or "I'm embarrassed" without being corrected. Validate first; these reactions are normal, not disloyal.
- Protect one-to-one time — even 15 unhurried minutes each, doing something they choose, tells a sibling they matter just as much.
- Keep rules fair and consistent — children watch closely for fairness. Apply the same calm, predictable expectations to everyone, so siblings don't feel the rules bend around their brother or sister.
- Explain in age-appropriate words — a simple "his big feelings sometimes come out as shouting, and we're all learning ways to help" reduces the fear and self-blame younger children often carry.
- Protect their space and belongings — practical safeguards (a lockable drawer, a quiet retreat) lower daily friction and resentment.
- Don't make them a junior parent — older siblings may step in to manage or keep peace; let them be a child, not a co-regulator.
- Watch for the "too good" child — the sibling who never complains may be suppressing distress. Check in gently and often.
When to seek extra help
If a sibling becomes withdrawn, anxious, frequently tearful, struggles at school, or starts mirroring defiant behaviour to get attention, it's worth a conversation with a professional. Family-focused support and parent coaching ease the home dynamic for every child, not only the one with ODD.The Pinnacle way
This is general guidance, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care. Our behaviour therapy and parent-coaching programmes treat the whole family as the unit of support, so siblings are included, not sidelined. Learn how we build a precise, strengths-based picture with the AbilityScore®, and explore [our approach](/) to family-centred care.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics family and behavioural health guidance (HealthyChildren.org); WHO ICD-11 framing of oppositional defiant disorder; CDC resources on managing childhood behavioural concerns and supporting families.Next step — Want a plan that supports your whole family, siblings included? Book a family assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Watch for a sibling becoming withdrawn, anxious or tearful, struggling at school, taking on a 'junior parent' role, being 'too good' to avoid trouble, or copying defiant behaviour to get attention.
Try this at home
Protect a short, daily one-to-one window for each sibling — even 15 minutes doing something they choose tells them clearly that they matter just as much.
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 it normal for siblings to feel angry or resentful?
Yes — frustration, jealousy, guilt and embarrassment are all common and normal. The most helpful response is to let siblings name those feelings without correction, so they feel heard rather than disloyal.
Should I explain ODD to my other children?
Yes, in age-appropriate words. A simple explanation that their sibling's big feelings sometimes come out as shouting and that the whole family is learning ways to help reduces fear and self-blame, especially in younger children.
My older child keeps stepping in to keep the peace — is that a problem?
Gently ease them out of that role. Siblings should be allowed to be children, not co-regulators or junior parents. Carrying that responsibility can quietly build stress and resentment over time.