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Transition

How to talk to your teen about puberty and body changes

Talk to your teen about puberty in small, frequent, judgement-free moments rather than one big talk. Use accurate words, normalise both the physical and emotional changes, and listen more than you lecture. For neurodivergent teens, add visual aids, advance warning and concrete step-by-step support.

How to talk to your teen about puberty and body changes
Talking to Your Teen About Puberty & Body Changes — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

The body changes of adolescence are easier to navigate when your teen knows the conversation is open, calm and judgement-free — and that you started it first.

In short

Talk early, often and in small everyday moments rather than one big "talk". Use accurate, matter-of-fact words for body parts and changes, listen more than you lecture, and let your teen know that what they're experiencing — growth spurts, mood swings, body hair, periods, voice changes — is normal and expected. For a young person who is autistic, has ADHD or a developmental difference, add extra structure: visual aids, advance warning and concrete language, because abstract or sudden changes can feel especially overwhelming.

How to open the conversation

Make it ordinary, not an event. Short, frequent chats — in the car, while cooking, walking — feel safer than a sit-down lecture. Follow your teen's lead and answer the question they actually asked.

Use clear, accurate words. Correct names for body parts and changes reduce shame and confusion. Calm, factual language signals that nothing here is taboo or dirty.

Normalise the feelings too. Puberty isn't only physical — moods, self-consciousness, attraction and privacy needs all shift. Naming this helps your teen feel understood rather than "wrong".

Listen first. Ask what they already know or have heard from friends or online, then gently fill the gaps. Your steadiness matters more than having every answer.

For neurodivergent teens, add scaffolding:

  • Prepare changes in advance with simple visuals or social stories
  • Use literal, concrete language — avoid euphemisms that confuse
  • Break self-care routines (hygiene, periods, shaving) into clear steps
  • Respect sensory sensitivities around new products, clothing or textures

When to seek extra support

Reach out if your teen shows distress that doesn't settle, withdrawal, big changes in mood or sleep, or finds the transition genuinely hard to manage day to day. A developmental check can help you understand whether they need targeted support with communication, emotional regulation or daily-living skills through this stage.

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 app or an online form. For teens who need a little more help building independence and self-care through this transition, our therapists can shape a plan that fits your family — explore occupational therapy, understand how the AbilityScore is established, or [start here](/).

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on talking with adolescents about puberty and growing up (healthychildren.org); WHO adolescent health resources on healthy development.

Next step — Want guidance tailored to your teen's needs? [Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician](/).

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

Persistent distress, withdrawal, big mood or sleep changes, or real difficulty managing self-care and daily routines through this transition.

Try this at home

Skip the one big 'talk'. Use short, ordinary moments — in the car or while cooking — so your teen feels it's safe to ask anything, anytime.

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

When should I start talking to my child about puberty?

Start early and build gradually — many changes begin between ages 8 and 13, so simple, age-appropriate conversations before then help your child feel prepared rather than alarmed. Frequent small chats work far better than one big talk.

How is talking about puberty different for a neurodivergent teen?

Autistic teens or those with ADHD often benefit from extra structure: advance warning of changes, literal and concrete language, visual aids or social stories, and self-care routines broken into clear steps. Sensory sensitivities around new products or clothing may also need consideration.

What if my teen seems very distressed by these changes?

Persistent distress, withdrawal, or difficulty managing daily self-care is worth attention. A developmental check can help you understand whether targeted support with emotional regulation or daily-living skills would help — it is not a diagnosis, just clarity.

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