Emotional
How Emotional Development Unfolds in the Early Years
Emotional development is how a child learns to feel, express, understand and eventually manage emotions, and to read others' feelings. In the early years it moves from simple contentment and distress in infancy, through big toddler emotions and the first empathy, towards naming feelings and beginning self-soothing by the preschool years. It grows fastest inside warm, responsive relationships, and there is a wide, healthy range of what is typical.
From the first wobbly smile to the proud stamp of a toddler's foot, emotions are a child's earliest language — and they grow in beautifully predictable steps.
In short
Emotional development is how a child gradually learns to feel, express, understand and eventually manage their feelings — and to read the feelings of others. In the early years this unfolds from simple states like contentment and distress in infancy, through big toddler emotions and the dawn of empathy, towards naming feelings and beginning self-soothing by the preschool years. It grows fastest inside warm, responsive relationships, and there is a wide, healthy range of what is typical.How emotions grow, year by year
Emotional skills build on the brain's social-emotional wiring, which is shaped most by everyday loving interactions — the back-and-forth of comfort, play and reassurance.- 0–12 months: Babies show pleasure, distress and excitement, settle when comforted, and begin to share smiles and reach for familiar carers. A baby who is soothed reliably is learning that feelings can be managed with a trusted adult.
- 1–2 years: Toddlers feel big, fast-changing emotions — joy, frustration, fear — and have few words to release them, so meltdowns are normal. They start to show affection, seek a parent when upset, and notice when others are sad.
- 2–3 years: The first sparks of empathy and pretend play appear; children begin to name simple feelings ("happy", "sad") and test independence, which brings both pride and tantrums.
- 3–5 years: Children grow better at waiting, sharing, recovering from upset with support, and understanding that others feel differently from them — the roots of friendship and self-regulation.
These steps are guides, not deadlines. A wide spread is normal, and warm, consistent responses are the single biggest help.
When a gentle check helps
Consider a friendly developmental review if, over time, your child rarely seeks comfort or shares smiles, shows very little interest in others, struggles intensely and persistently to settle far beyond what peers manage, or seems to lose social-emotional skills they once had. Early observation is reassuring far more often than not — and where support helps, starting sooner is gentler.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 team looks at the whole child — feelings, play, communication and relationships together — and builds an individualised plan drawing on behavioural therapy and family support as part of the wider [emotional development](/) pathway.Trusted sources
The WHO International Classification of Functioning describes emotional functions as part of healthy development; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren outline social-emotional milestones across infancy and the preschool years.Next step — If you would like reassurance about how your child is growing emotionally, book a gentle developmental check and start with confidence.
What to watch
Over time: rarely seeking comfort or sharing smiles, very little interest in others, persistent intense difficulty settling far beyond peers, or losing social-emotional skills once present.
Try this at home
Name feelings out loud as they happen — "You're cross because the tower fell" — and stay calm and close during meltdowns. Hearing emotions named and feeling safely accompanied through them is how children learn to manage feelings themselves.
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
At what age do children start showing empathy?
The first sparks of empathy — noticing and reacting to others' feelings — usually appear around 2 to 3 years, and grow steadily through the preschool years. Babies and young toddlers may already mirror a carer's mood, which is an early foundation for empathy.
Are toddler tantrums a sign of poor emotional development?
No — tantrums are a normal part of emotional development. Toddlers feel big, fast-changing emotions but have few words and limited self-control, so feelings overflow. Calm, consistent comfort actually teaches regulation over time.
How can I support my child's emotional growth at home?
Respond warmly and reliably to comfort-seeking, name feelings as they arise, play together, and stay calm during upsets. These everyday loving interactions are the strongest support for healthy emotional development.